AJTMH Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 42(1), 1990, pp. 17-23
Copyright © 1990 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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Use of Synthetic Peptides in the Study of the Antibody Response to Plasmodium Vivax Sporozoites

Antonello Pessi, Martine Michel, Elisabetta Bianchi, Asoka Mendis, Chantal Tougne, Antonio S. Verdini, Paul-Henri Lambert, Richard Carter, Kamini Mendis AND Giuseppe del Giudice
WHO-Immunology Research and Training Center, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland; Sclavo, Monterotondo, Italy; University of Colombo, Colombo, Sri Lanka; and University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Synthetic peptides reproducing 4 DRADGQPAG (D4) and a sequential array of DRADGQPAG and DRAAGQPAG repeats (DDAAD) of the Plasmodium vivax circumsporozoite (CS) protein were investigated for their potential use in the detection of P. vivax sporozoite antibodies in human sera. These peptides specifically inhibited the binding of monoclonal antibodies to the P. vivax CS protein in Western blots. However, when D4 and DDAAD peptides were used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of human antibodies, more sera bound to the DDAAD (61%) than to the D4 peptide (22%). This binding was specific, and suggested that the DDAAD peptide contained epitopes constituted by the sequential array of DRADGQPAG and DRAAGQPAG repeat variants and absent in the D4 peptide. The ELISA using the DDAAD peptide was applied to the detection of P. vivax CS protein antibodies in a large number of sera from Kataragama, an endemic area in Sri Lanka. The prevalence of these antibodies increased with age, reaching 40% in adults > 50 years old. The ELISA employing the DDAAD peptide represents a simple and useful tool for the analysis of the antibody response to P. vivax sporozoites in naturally exposed individuals.







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