The Roles of Secreted Antibody and Bir Variant Antigens in Immunity to Plasmodium Berghei

The Roles of Secreted Antibody and Bir Variant Antigens in Immunity to Plasmodium Berghei

Auteur : Julia Katherine Nunes

Date de publication : 2008

Éditeur : Harvard University

Nombre de pages : 276

Résumé du livre

The next two sections of this project focus on the parasite side of immunity and the antigens that are potential targets of the secreted antibody described in Chapter 1. One variant antigen family, pir (Plasmodium interspersed repeat), has been identified in at least six Plasmodium species, which infect humans, primates, and rodents. We hypothesized that the target of the secreted antibody required for immunity is the pir family homologue in P. berghei, the bir genes. In Chapter 2, we describe our characterization of the bir gene family: a phylogenetic and expression analysis that utilized the parasite populations generated by our infection and cure mouse model. We demonstrate that multiple bir genes are expressed at once in a population of bir genes and that the immune status of the host does not influence the bir gene repertoire, suggesting that the bir genes do not function as a canonical variant antigen family. In Chapter 3, we test our hypothesis that the BIR proteins are the target of secreted antibody. We found that one of the BIR proteins is immunogenic and antibodies are raised against it during natural infection. Immunization with this BIR protein was unable to protect mice against infection. Taken together, our findings suggest that the bir family is not the primary target of the immunity generated by mice during infection and cure.

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