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Gene disruption of Plasmodium falciparum p52 results in attenuation of malaria liver stage development in cultured primary human hepatocytes

Authors :
Chris J. Janse
Melissa R. van Dijk
Shahid M. Khan
Olivier Silvie
Dominique Mazier
Jean-François Franetich
Andrew P. Waters
Stephen L. Hoffman
Samir Yalaoui
Marga van de Vegte-Bolmer
Robert W. Sauerwein
Audrey Gego
Ben C. L. van Schaijk
Geert-Jan van Gemert
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 3, Iss 10, p e3549 (2008), PLoS One, 3, 10, PLoS One, 3
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Difficulties with inducing sterile and long lasting protective immunity against malaria with subunit vaccines has renewed interest in vaccinations with attenuated Plasmodium parasites. Immunizations with sporozoites that are attenuated by radiation (RAS) can induce strong protective immunity both in humans and rodent models of malaria. Recently, in rodent parasites it has been shown that through the deletion of a single gene, sporozoites can also become attenuated in liver stage development and, importantly, immunization with these sporozoites results in immune responses identical to RAS. The promise of vaccination using these genetically attenuated sporozoites (GAS) depends on translating the results in rodent malaria models to human malaria. In this study, we perform the first essential step in this transition by disrupting, p52, in P. falciparum an ortholog of the rodent parasite gene, p36p, which we had previously shown can confer long lasting protective immunity in mice. These P. falciparum P52 deficient sporozoites demonstrate gliding motility, cell traversal and an invasion rate into primary human hepatocytes in vitro that is comparable to wild type sporozoites. However, inside the host hepatocyte development is arrested very soon after invasion. This study reveals, for the first time, that disrupting the equivalent gene in both P. falciparum and rodent malaria Plasmodium species generates parasites that become similarly arrested during liver stage development and these results pave the way for further development of GAS for human use.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
3
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PloS one
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a52fee655e67cb5fa1d754cb4e55646d