Two mosquito salivary antigens demonstrate promise as biomarkers of recent exposure to P. falciparum infected mosquito bites.

IF 5 2区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY
Sarah Lapidus, Morgan M Goheen, Mouhamad Sy, Awa B Deme, Ibrahima Mbaye Ndiaye, Younous Diedhiou, Amadou Moctar Mbaye, Kelly A Hagadorn, Seynabou Diouf Sene, Mariama Nicole Pouye, Laty Gaye Thiam, Aboubacar Ba, Noemi Guerra, Alassane Mbengue, Hamidah Raduwan, Jacqueline Gagnon, Inés Vigan-Womas, Sunil Parikh, Albert I Ko, Daouda Ndiaye, Erol Fikrig, Yu-Min Chuang, Amy K Bei
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Abstract

Background: Measuring malaria transmission intensity using the traditional entomological inoculation rate is difficult. Antibody responses to mosquito salivary proteins like SG6 have been used as biomarkers of exposure to Anopheles mosquito bites. Here, we investigate four mosquito salivary proteins as potential biomarkers of human exposure to mosquitoes infected with P. falciparum: mosGILT, SAMSP1, AgSAP, and AgTRIO.

Methods: We tested population-level human immune responses in longitudinal and cross-sectional plasma from individuals with known P. falciparum infection from low and moderate transmission areas in Senegal using a multiplexed magnetic bead-based assay.

Results: AgSAP and AgTRIO were the best indicators of recent exposure to infected mosquitoes. Antibody responses to AgSAP, in a moderate endemic area, and to AgTRIO in both low and moderate endemic areas, were significantly higher than responses in a healthy non-endemic control cohort (p-values = 0.0245, 0.0064, and <0.0001 respectively). No antibody responses significantly differed between the low and moderate transmission area, or between equivalent groups during and outside the malaria transmission seasons. For AgSAP and AgTRIO, reactivity peaked 2-4 weeks after clinical P. falciparum infection and declined 3 months after infection.

Discussion: Reactivity to AgSAP and AgTRIO peaked after infection, with no differences between transmission seasons within region or between low and moderate transmission regions. This suggests that reactivity reflects exposure to infectious mosquitoes or recent bites rather than general mosquito exposure. Kinetics suggest reactivity is relatively short-lived. AgSAP and AgTRIO are promising candidates to incorporate into multiplexed assays for serosurveillance of population-level changes in P. falciparum-infected mosquito exposure.

两种蚊子唾液抗原有望成为近期接触恶性疟原虫感染蚊虫叮咬的生物标志物。
背景:用传统的昆虫接种率来衡量疟疾传播强度是很困难的。蚊子唾液蛋白(如 SG6)的抗体反应已被用作暴露于按蚊叮咬的生物标志物。在此,我们研究了四种蚊子唾液蛋白作为人类接触恶性疟原虫蚊子的潜在生物标志物:mosGILT、SAMSP1、AgSAP 和 AgTRIO:方法:我们使用一种基于多重磁珠的检测方法,对塞内加尔低度和中度传播地区已知感染恶性疟原虫的个体的纵向和横截面血浆中的人群免疫反应进行了检测:结果:AgSAP 和 AgTRIO 是近期暴露于受感染蚊子的最佳指标。在中度流行地区对 AgSAP 的抗体反应,以及在低度和中度流行地区对 AgTRIO 的抗体反应,都明显高于健康的非流行对照组(P 值 = 0.0245、0.0064 和讨论):对 AgSAP 和 AgTRIO 的反应在感染后达到峰值,地区内不同传播季节之间以及低度和中度传播地区之间没有差异。这表明,反应性反映的是暴露于感染性蚊子或最近被叮咬的情况,而不是一般蚊子的暴露情况。动力学表明反应性相对短暂。AgSAP 和 AgTRIO 很有希望被纳入多重检测中,用于血清监测受恶性疟原虫感染蚊子暴露的人群水平变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Journal of Infectious Diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
13.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
449
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Published continuously since 1904, The Journal of Infectious Diseases (JID) is the premier global journal for original research on infectious diseases. The editors welcome Major Articles and Brief Reports describing research results on microbiology, immunology, epidemiology, and related disciplines, on the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of infectious diseases; on the microbes that cause them; and on disorders of host immune responses. JID is an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
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