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1.
At the 2010 Keystone Symposium on "Malaria: new approaches to understanding Host-Parasite interactions", an extra scientific session to discuss animal models in malaria research was convened at the request of participants. This was prompted by the concern of investigators that skepticism in the malaria community about the use and relevance of animal models, particularly rodent models of severe malaria, has impacted on funding decisions and publication of research using animal models. Several speakers took the opportunity to demonstrate the similarities between findings in rodent models and human severe disease, as well as points of difference. The variety of malaria presentations in the different experimental models parallels the wide diversity of human malaria disease and, therefore, might be viewed as a strength. Many of the key features of human malaria can be replicated in a variety of nonhuman primate models, which are very under-utilized. The importance of animal models in the discovery of new anti-malarial drugs was emphasized. The major conclusions of the session were that experimental and human studies should be more closely linked so that they inform each other, and that there should be wider access to relevant clinical material.  相似文献   

2.
The misery and suffering caused worldwide by infection with the malaria parasite, especially Plasmodium falciparum, has been well documented. Although no licensed vaccine against malaria currently exists, progress has accelerated in recent years towards the goal of developing one. Although the complexity of the malaria parasite has made the malaria vaccine development process tenuous, advances in science and in the vaccine development process as well as increases in funding are encouraging. These advances, coupled with the results of the recent clinical trial of the vaccine candidate RTS,S, have added new vigor to the idea that a malaria vaccine is not only possible but probable.  相似文献   

3.
The development of a vaccine against malaria is a major research priority given the burden of disease, death and economic loss inflicted upon the tropical world by this parasite. Despite decades of effort, however, a vaccine remains elusive. The best candidate is a subunit vaccine termed RTS,S but this provides only partial protection against clinical disease. This review examines what is known about protective immunity against pre-erythrocytic stage malaria by considering the humoral and T cell-mediated immune responses that are induced by attenuated sporozoites and by the RTS,S vaccine. On the basis of these observations a set of research priorities are defined that are crucial for the development of a vaccine capable of inducing long-lasting and high-grade protection against malaria.  相似文献   

4.
There is no licenced vaccine against any human parasitic disease and Plasmodium falciparum malaria, a major cause of infectious mortality, presents a great challenge to vaccine developers. This has led to the assessment of a wide variety of approaches to malaria vaccine design and development, assisted by the availability of a safe challenge model for small-scale efficacy testing of vaccine candidates. Malaria vaccine development has been at the forefront of assessing many new vaccine technologies including novel adjuvants, vectored prime-boost regimes and the concept of community vaccination to block malaria transmission. Most current vaccine candidates target a single stage of the parasite's life cycle and vaccines against the early pre-erythrocytic stages have shown most success. A protein in adjuvant vaccine, working through antibodies against sporozoites, and viral vector vaccines targeting the intracellular liver-stage parasite with cellular immunity show partial efficacy in humans, and the anti-sporozoite vaccine is currently in phase III trials. However, a more effective malaria vaccine suitable for widespread cost-effective deployment is likely to require a multi-component vaccine targeting more than one life cycle stage. The most attractive near-term approach to develop such a product is to combine existing partially effective pre-erythrocytic vaccine candidates.  相似文献   

5.
There are several malaria vaccine candidates at various stages of development. Many of these target blood stages of Plasmodium falciparum. The spleen is a key site for removal of parasitized red blood cells, generation of immunity and production of new red blood cells during malaria. This article describes how all of these processes are modified following infection, and suggests that until we fully understand how these processes function and are modulated by infection, appropriate malaria vaccine design and delivery will be extremely difficult to achieve.  相似文献   

6.
A safe and effective malaria vaccine would contribute greatly to the control and prevention of the disease. Although a review of global activity in malaria vaccine development does reflect significant activity, progress has remained slow. This article discusses the current vaccine candidates, with emphasis on those in the clinic, and explains the numerous challenges to making and evaluating malaria vaccines, which have resulted in only a few approaches being adopted and repeatedly evaluated. Against a parasite with more than 5200 genes, the lack of definitive knowledge regarding the nature of protective immunity and absence of reliable surrogates of protection are among the key challenges to a rational evaluation and prioritization of candidate vaccines. Pursuing the current R&D strategies may not result in the availability of a vaccine with characteristics suitable to impact significantly on disease morbidity in developing countries. Therefore, it is critical that the main challenges to malaria vaccine development be unambiguously identified and collectively addressed.  相似文献   

7.
Existing control measures have significantly reduced malaria morbidity and mortality in the last two decades, although these reductions are now stalling. Significant efforts have been undertaken to develop malaria vaccines. Recently, extensive progress in malaria vaccine development has been made for Plasmodium falciparum. To date, only the RTS,S/AS01 vaccine has been tested in Phase 3 clinical trials and is now under implementation, despite modest efficacy. Therefore, the development of a malaria transmission-blocking vaccine (TBV) will be essential for malaria elimination. Only a limited number of TBVs have reached pre-clinical or clinical development with several major challenges impeding their development, including low immunogenicity in humans. TBV development efforts against P. vivax, the second major cause of malaria morbidity, lag far behind those for P. falciparum. In this review we summarize the latest progress, challenges and innovations in P. vivax TBV research and discuss how to accelerate its development.  相似文献   

8.
Studies on the natural immune responses to the sexual stages of malaria parasites have been reviewed in the context of human malaria transmission-blocking vaccines. Antibodies against the sexual stages of the malaria parasite, gametocytes and gametes, are readily evoked by natural malaria infections. These antibodies that suppress infectivity at high concentrations can, at low concentrations, enhance the development of the parasite in the mosquito; however, because enhancing antibodies are prevalent during natural malaria infections, it is likely that a vaccine would rapidly boost these antibodies to blocking levels. The immunogenicity of sexual stage antigens appears to be constrained in the human host, probably due to T epitope polymorphism and MHC restriction in humans. These constraints apply mainly to those antigens that are sensitive targets of host immunity such as the gamete surface antigens and not to internal gamete antigens, indicating that antigenic polymorphism may have evolved in response to immune selection pressure. Evidence for immunosuppression of the host by exposure to endemic malaria is presented and its consequences on vaccine development are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Although Plasmodium falciparum is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality due to malaria worldwide, nearly 2.5 billion people, mostly outside Africa, are also at risk from malaria caused by Plasmodium vivax infection. Currently, almost all efforts to develop a malaria vaccine have focused on P. falciparum. For example, there are 23 P. falciparum vaccine candidates undergoing advanced clinical studies and only two P. vivax vaccine candidates being tested in preliminary (Phase I) clinical trials, with few others being assessed in preclinical studies. More investment and a greater effort toward the development of P. vivax vaccine components for a multi-species vaccine are required. This is mainly because of the wide geographical coexistence of both parasite species but also because of increasing drug resistance, recent observations of severe and lethal P. vivax cases and relapsing parasite behaviour. Availability of the P. vivax genome has contributed to antigen discovery but new means to test vaccines in future trials remain to be designed.  相似文献   

10.
Although the malaria parasite was discovered more than 120 years ago, it is only during the past 20 years, following the cloning of malaria genes, that we have been able to think rationally about vaccine design and development. Effective vaccines for malaria could interrupt the life cycle of the parasite at different stages in the human host or in the mosquito. The purpose of this review is to outline the challenges we face in developing a vaccine that will limit growth of the parasite during the stage within red blood cells--the stage responsible for all the symptoms and pathology of malaria. More than 15 vaccine trials have either been completed or are in progress, and many more are planned. Success in current trials could lead to a vaccine capable of saving more than 2 million lives per year.  相似文献   

11.
Malaria vaccine development: current status   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The development of an effective malaria vaccine represents one of the most important approaches that would provide a cost-effective intervention for addition to currently available malaria control strategies. Here, Howard Engers and Tore Godal review recent advances. Over the past decade there has been considerable progress in the understanding of immune mechanisms involved in conferring protection to malaria and in the identification of vaccine candidate antigens and their genes. Several new vaccines have entered Phase I/II trials recently, new adjuvants have been developed for human use and new approaches, such as DNA vaccines and structural modification of antigens to circumvent some of the strategies the parasite uses to avoid the immune response, are being applied. Thus, from the TDR perspective, global malaria vaccine development is entering a crucial period with unprecedented opportunities.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The major merozoite surface protein as a malaria vaccine target   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Experts gathered for two days in the summer of 1992 at the National Institutes of Health and the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research to discuss the potential of a major merozoite surface protein (MSP-1) in malaria vaccine development. The participants came in an exemplary spirit of co-operation, sharing ideas and unpublished data toward the common goal of a malaria vaccine. Their conclusions are presented here by Carter Diggs, Ripley Bollou and Lou Miller.  相似文献   

14.
Through a collaborative project led by the Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research (PNGIMR), Papua New Guinea has a significant role in the global effort to develop a malaria vaccine, ensuring that the malaria patterns in Asia and the Pacific region are considered in vaccine development strategies. Some of the major perspectives and achievements of the program are discussed here, one of the most successful being the trial of Combination B, a vaccine comprising three asexual blood-stage proteins [merozoite surface protein (MSP)1, MSP2 and ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen (RESA)], which led to a considerable reduction of parasite density in the immunized children.  相似文献   

15.
MOTIVATION: We present a study of antigen expression signals from a newly developed high-throughput protein microarray technique. These signals are a measure of antibody-antigen binding activity and provide a basis for understanding humoral immune responses to various infectious agents and supporting vaccine and diagnostic development. RESULTS: We investigate the characteristics of these expression profiles and show that noise models, normalization, variance estimation and differential expression analysis techniques developed in the context of DNA microarray analysis can be adapted and applied to these protein arrays. Using a high-dimensional dataset containing measurements of expression profiles of antibody reactivity against each protein (295 antigens and 9 controls) in 42 malaria (Plasmodium falciparum) protein arrays derived from 22 donors with various clinical presentations of malaria, we present a methodology for the analysis and identification of significantly expressed antigens targeted by immune responses for individual sera, groups of sera and across stages of infection. We also conduct a short study highlighting the top immunoreactive antigens where we identify three novel high priority antigens for future evaluation. AVAILABILITY: All software programs (in R) used for the analysis described in this paper are freely available for academic purposes at www.igb.uci.edu/servers/servers.html.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Neither GMP malaria antigens nor GMP vaccines have been compared for efficacy in monkeys and humans. It is too risky to base categorical (go/no go) development decisions on results obtained using partially characterized (non-GMP) antigens, adjuvants that are too toxic for human use or unvalidated primate models. Such practices will lead to serious errors (e.g. failure to identify and stop flawed efforts, rejection of effective vaccine strategies) and unjustifiable delays. Successful malaria vaccine development will emphasize definitive field trials in populations at risk of malaria to define and improve vaccine efficacy.  相似文献   

18.
Scientists from several organizations worldwide are working together to develop a multistage, multigene DNA-based vaccine against Plasmodium falciparum malaria. This collaborative vaccine development effort is named Multi-Stage DNA-based Malaria Vaccine Operation. An advisory board of international experts in vaccinology, malariology and field trials provides the scientific oversight to support the operation. This article discusses the rationale for the approach, underlying concepts and the pre-clinical development process, and provides a brief outline of the plans for the clinical testing of a multistage, multiantigen malaria vaccine based on DNA plasmid immunization technology.  相似文献   

19.
疟疾肆虐,对全球公共卫生健康提出了严峻的挑战,疫苗作为一个关键性的预防策略,为消除疟疾提供了新的机遇。随着现代科技的高速发展,科学家们针对疟疾疫苗的研究正如火如荼进行着,其中红细胞前期疟疾疫苗、红细胞内期疟疾疫苗、传播阻断疫苗以及多抗原、多表位重组疟疾疫苗和多阶段融合蛋白疟疾疫苗等的相关研究已取得了重大进展。虽目前尚未有任何一种疟疾疫苗获得上市许可,未来作为可以拯救生命的优质、高效的抗疟疫苗或将成为根除疟疾不可替代的工具。  相似文献   

20.
Vaccines against infectious diseases have had great successes in the history of public health. Major breakthroughs have occurred in the development of vaccine-based interventions against viral and bacterial pathogens through the application of classical vaccine design strategies. In contrast the development of a malaria vaccine has been slow. Plasmodium falciparum malaria affects millions of people with nearly half of the world population at risk of infection. Decades of dedicated research has taught us that developing an effective vaccine will be time consuming, challenging, and expensive. Nevertheless, recent advancements such as the optimization of robust protein synthesis platforms, high-throughput immunoscreening approaches, reverse vaccinology, structural design of immunogens, lymphocyte repertoire sequencing, and the utilization of artificial intelligence, have renewed the prospects of an accelerated discovery of the key antigens in malaria. A deeper understanding of the major factors underlying the immunological and molecular mechanisms of malaria might provide a comprehensive approach to identifying novel and highly efficacious vaccines. In this review we discuss progress in novel antigen discoveries that leverage on the wheat germ cell-free protein synthesis system (WGCFS) to accelerate malaria vaccine development.  相似文献   

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