Abstract
CD4+ T cell responses to the Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 in children with mild malaria
Gitau, E. N.
Tuju, J.
Karanja, H.
Stevenson, L.
Requena, P.
Kimani, E.
Olotu, A.
Kimani, D.
Marsh, K.
Bull, P.
Urban, B. C.
J Immunol. 2014; 1921753-61
Permanent descriptor
https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1200547The immune response against the variant surface Ag Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) is a key component of clinical immunity against malaria. We have investigated the development and maintenance of CD4(+) T cell responses to a small semiconserved area of the Duffy binding-like domain (DBL)alpha-domain of PfEMP1, the DBLalpha-tag. Young children were followed up longitudinally, and parasites and PBMCs were isolated from 35 patients presenting with an acute case of uncomplicated malaria. The DBLalpha-tag from the PfEMP1 dominantly expressed by the homologous parasite isolate was cloned and expressed as recombinant protein. The recombinant DBLalpha-tag was used to activate PBMCs collected from each acute episode and from an annual cross-sectional survey performed after the acute malaria episode. In this article, we report that CD4(+) T cell responses to the homologous DBLalpha-tag were induced in 75% of the children at the time of the acute episode and in 62% of the children at the following cross-sectional survey on average 235 d later. Furthermore, children who had induced DBLalpha-tag-specific CD4(+)IL-4(+) T cells at the acute episode remained episode free for longer than children who induced other types of CD4(+) T cell responses. These results suggest that a wide range of DBLalpha-tag-specific CD4(+) T cell responses were induced in children with mild malaria and, in the case of CD4(+)IL-4(+) T cell responses, were associated with protection from clinical episodes.