Data from: Unravelling the immune signature of Plasmodium falciparum transmission-reducing immunity
Infection with Plasmodium can elicit antibodies that inhibit parasite survival in the mosquito, when they are ingested in an infectious blood meal. Here, we determine the transmission-reducing activity (TRA) of naturally acquired antibodies from 648 malaria-exposed individuals using lab-based mosquito-feeding assays. Transmission inhibition is significantly associated with antibody responses to Pfs48/45, Pfs230, and to 43 novel gametocyte proteins assessed by protein microarray. In field-based mosquito-feeding assays the likelihood and rate of mosquito infection are significantly lower for individuals reactive to Pfs48/45, Pfs230 or to combinations of the novel TRA-associated proteins. We also show that naturally acquired purified antibodies against key transmission-blocking epitopes of Pfs48/45 and Pfs230 are mechanistically involved in TRA, whereas sera depleted of these antibodies retain high-level, complement-independent TRA. Our analysis demonstrates that host antibody responses to gametocyte proteins are associated with reduced malaria transmission efficiency from humans to mosquitoes.
Keywords
Malaria; Transmission-reducing immunity; Gametocytes; Gametes; Protein microarray; Serology; Transmission| Item Type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| Resource Type |
Resource Type Resource Description Dataset UNSPECIFIED |
| Capture method | Experiment |
| Date | 9 February 2018 |
| Language(s) of written materials | English |
| Creator(s) | Stone, WJR; Campo, JJ; Ouédraogo, AL; Meerstein-Kessel, L; Morlais, I; Da, D; Cohuet, A; Nsango, S; Sutherland, CJ; van de Vegte-Bolmer, M; Siebelink-Stoter, R; van Gemert, G; Graumans, W; Lanke, K; Shandling, AD; Pablo, JV; Teng, AA; Jones, S; de Jong, RM; Fabra-García, A; Bradley, J; Roeffen, W; Lasonder, E; Gremo, G; Schwarzer, E; Janse, CJ; Singh, SK; Theisen, M; Felgner, P; Marti, M; Drakeley, C; Sauerwein, R; Bousema, T and Jore, MM |
| LSHTM Faculty/Department |
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology (-2023) Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases > Dept of Immunology and Infection (-2019) |
| Participating Institutions | London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom |
| Date Deposited | 16 Feb 2018 17:18 |
| Last Modified | 28 Sep 2018 21:20 |
| Publisher | Dryad Digital Repository |
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- Dryad Digital Repository (Online Data Resource)
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- Nature Communications (Data)
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- Dryad Digital Repository (Online Data Resource)
- ProteomeXchange Consortium (Data)
- Nature Communications (Data)