Plasmodium falciparum variant surface antigen expression varies between isolates causing severe and nonsevere malaria and is modified by acquired immunity

MA Nielsen, T Staalsoe, JAL Kurtzhals… - The Journal of …, 2002 - journals.aai.org
MA Nielsen, T Staalsoe, JAL Kurtzhals, BQ Goka, D Dodoo, M Alifrangis, TG Theander
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
In areas of endemic parasite transmission, protective immunity to Plasmodium falciparum
malaria is acquired over several years with numerous disease episodes. Acquisition of Abs
to parasite-encoded variant surface Ags (VSA) on the infected erythrocyte membrane is
important in the development of immunity, as disease-causing parasites appear to be those
not controlled by preexisting VSA-specific Abs. In this work we report that VSA expressed by
parasites from young Ghanaian children with P. falciparum malaria were commonly and …
Abstract
In areas of endemic parasite transmission, protective immunity to Plasmodium falciparum malaria is acquired over several years with numerous disease episodes. Acquisition of Abs to parasite-encoded variant surface Ags (VSA) on the infected erythrocyte membrane is important in the development of immunity, as disease-causing parasites appear to be those not controlled by preexisting VSA-specific Abs. In this work we report that VSA expressed by parasites from young Ghanaian children with P. falciparum malaria were commonly and strongly recognized by plasma Abs from healthy children in the same area, whereas recognition of VSA expressed by parasites from older children was weaker and less frequent. Independent of this, parasites isolated from children with severe malaria (cerebral malaria and severe anemia) were better recognized by VSA-specific plasma Abs than parasites obtained from children with nonsevere disease. This was not due to a higher infection multiplicity in younger patients or in patients with severe disease. Our data suggest that acquisition of VSA-specific Ab responses gradually restricts the VSA repertoire that is compatible with parasite survival in the semi-immune host. This appears to limit the risk of severe disease by discriminating against the expression of VSA likely to cause life-threatening complications, such as cerebral malaria and severe anemia. Such VSA seem to be preferred by parasites infecting a nonimmune host, suggesting that VSA expression and switching are not random, and that the VSA expression pattern is modulated by immunity. This opens the possibility of developing morbidity-reducing vaccines targeting a limited subset of common and particularly virulent VSA.
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