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Contribution ofPlasmodiumimmunomics: potential impact for serological testing and surveillance of malaria

Authors :
Bin Xu
Shen-Bo Chen
Kokouvi Kassegne
Yan-Bing Cui
Jun-Hu Chen
Yue Wang
Wang-Ping Deng
Xiao-Nong Zhou
Hai-Mo Shen
Eniola Michael Abe
Source :
Expert Review of Proteomics. 16:117-129
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2018.

Abstract

Introduction: Plasmodium vivax (Pv) and P. knowlesi account together for a considerable share of the global burden of malaria, along with P. falciparum (Pf). However, inaccurate diagnosis and undetectable asymptomatic/submicroscopic malaria infections remain very challenging. Blood-stage antigens involved in either invasion of red blood cells or sequestration/cytoadherence of parasitized erythrocytes have been immunomics-characterized, and are vital for the detection of malaria incidence. Areas covered: We review the recent advances in Plasmodium immunomics to discuss serological markers with potential for specific and sensitive diagnosis of malaria. Insights on alternative use of immunomics to assess malaria prevalence are also highlighted. Finally, we provide practical applications of serological markers as diagnostics, with an emphasis on dot immunogold filtration assay which holds promise for malaria diagnosis and epidemiological surveys. Expert commentary: The approach largely contributes to Pf and Pv research in identifying promising non-orthologous antigens able to detect malaria incidence and to differentiate between past and recent infections. However, further studies to profiling naturally acquired immune responses are expected in order to help discover/validate serological markers of no cross-seroreactivity and guide control interventions. More so, the application of immunomics to knowlesi infections would help validate the recently identified antigens and contribute to the discovery of additional biomarkers of exposure, immunity, or both.

Details

ISSN :
17448387 and 14789450
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Expert Review of Proteomics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a5c9a1e001feef726806f8e62d89950b