NIAID-Led Research Might Help Prevent Malaria and Aid Design of Next-Generation Vaccines

March 19, 2018

Malaria sporozoites, the infectious form of the malaria parasite. Credit NIAID Malaria sporozoites, the infectious form of the malaria parasite. Credit: NIAID

Scientists have discovered a human antibody that protected mice from infection with the deadliest malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. The research findings provide the basis for future testing in humans to determine if the antibody can provide short-term protection against malaria, and also may aid in vaccine design. Investigators at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, led the research with colleagues at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Currently, there is no highly effective, long-lasting vaccine to prevent malaria, a mosquito-spread disease that causes some 430,000 deaths each year, primarily among young children in sub-Saharan Africa.

The research team isolated the antibody, called CIS43, from the blood of a volunteer who had received an experimental vaccine made from whole, weakened malaria parasites (PfSPZ Vaccine-Sanaria). The volunteer was later exposed to infectious malaria-carrying mosquitoes under carefully controlled conditions and did not become infected. In two different models of malaria infection in mice, CIS43 was highly effective at preventing malaria infection. If confirmed through additional studies in people, CIS43 could be developed as a prophylactic measure to prevent infection for several months after administration, the researchers say. Such a prophylactic antibody could be useful for tourists, health care workers, military personnel or others who travel to areas where malaria is common. Moreover, if the antibody prevented malaria infection for up to six months, it might be combined with antimalarial drugs and be deployed as part of mass drug administration efforts that potentially could eliminate the disease in malaria-endemic regions.

Detailed examination of CIS43 revealed that it works by binding to a specific portion (epitope) of a key parasite surface protein. This epitope occurs only once along the length of the surface protein. In addition, the CIS43-binding epitope is conserved across 99.8 percent of all known strains of P. falciparum, making it an attractive target for next-generation experimental malaria vaccines designed to elicit production of this neutralizing antibody.

Researchers at the NIAID Vaccine Research Center are planning to assess the safety and protective efficacy of the newly described CIS43 antibody next year in controlled human malaria infection challenge trials.

Additional collaborators on the study included scientists at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, the Seattle Biomedical Research Institute and Sanaria Inc., Rockville, Maryland.

This research was supported in part by a grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (GM56550) and by the National Cancer Institute contract HHSN261200800001E.Production and characterization of the PfSPZ Vaccine were supported in part by NIAID grant 5R44AI058375-08.

ARTICLE:

NK Kisalu et al. A human monoclonal antibody prevents malaria infection by targeting a new site of vulnerability on the parasite. Nature Medicine DOI: 10.1038/nm.4512 (2018).

WHO:

NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., is available to discuss this research.

Robert A. Seder, M.D., Vaccine Research Center, NIAID, led the research team at NIAID and is also available to discuss this paper.