Transmission-Blocking Vaccines: Old Friends and New Prospects
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Infection and Immunity
Abstract
In the progression of the life cycle of Plasmodium falciparum, a small
proportion of asexual parasites differentiate into male or female sexual forms called
gametocytes. Just like their asexual counterparts, gametocytes are contained within
the infected host’s erythrocytes (RBCs). However, unlike their asexual partners, they
do not exit the RBC until they are taken up in a blood meal by a mosquito. In the
mosquito midgut, they are stimulated to emerge from the RBC, undergo fertilization,
and ultimately produce tens of thousands of sporozoites that are infectious to humans.
This transmission cycle can be blocked by antibodies targeting proteins exposed
on the parasite surface in the mosquito midgut, a process that has led to the
development of candidate transmission-blocking vaccines (TBV), including some that
are in clinical trials. Here we review the leading TBV antigens and highlight the ongoing
search for additional gametocyte/gamete surface antigens, as well as antigens
on the surfaces of gametocyte-infected erythrocytes, which can potentially become
a new group of TBV candidates.
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Research Article
Citation
Acquah FK, Adjah J, Williamson KC, Amoah LE. 2019. Transmission-blocking vaccines: old friends and new prospects. Infect Immun 87:e00775-18. https://doi.org/10.1128/ IAI.00775-18.