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A Pvs25 mRNA vaccine induces complete and durable transmission-blocking immunity to Plasmodium vivax.

Authors :
Kunkeaw, Nawapol
Nguitragool, Wang
Takashima, Eizo
Kangwanrangsan, Niwat
Muramatsu, Hiromi
Tachibana, Mayumi
Ishino, Tomoko
Lin, Paulo J. C.
Tam, Ying K.
Pichyangkul, Sathit
Tsuboi, Takafumi
Pardi, Norbert
Sattabongkot, Jetsumon
Source :
NPJ Vaccines; 12/14/2023, Vol. 8 Issue 1, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Plasmodium vivax (P. vivax) is the major malaria parasite outside of Africa and no vaccine is available against it. A vaccine that interrupts parasite transmission (transmission-blocking vaccine, TBV) is considered highly desirable to reduce the spread of P. vivax and to accelerate its elimination. However, the development of a TBV against this pathogen has been hampered by the inability to culture the parasite as well as the low immunogenicity of the vaccines developed to date. Pvs25 is the most advanced TBV antigen candidate for P. vivax. However, in previous phase I clinical trials, TBV vaccines based on Pvs25 yielded low antibody responses or had unacceptable safety profiles. As the nucleoside-modified mRNA–lipid nanoparticle (mRNA–LNP) vaccine platform proved to be safe and effective in humans, we generated and tested mRNA–LNP vaccines encoding several versions of Pvs25 in mice. We found that in a prime-boost vaccination schedule, all Pvs25 mRNA–LNP vaccines elicited robust antigen-specific antibody responses. Furthermore, when compared with a Pvs25 recombinant protein vaccine formulated with Montanide ISA-51 adjuvant, the full-length Pvs25 mRNA–LNP vaccine induced a stronger and longer-lasting functional immunity. Seven months after the second vaccination, vaccine-induced antibodies retained the ability to fully block P. vivax transmission in direct membrane feeding assays, whereas the blocking activity induced by the protein/ISA-51 vaccine dropped significantly. Taken together, we report on mRNA vaccines targeting P. vivax and demonstrate that Pvs25 mRNA–LNP outperformed an adjuvanted Pvs25 protein vaccine suggesting that it is a promising candidate for further testing in non-human primates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20590105
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
NPJ Vaccines
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174206397
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-023-00786-9