Genetic immunisation by liver stage antigen 3 protects chimpanzees against malaria despite low immune responses.

BACKGROUND: The true interest of genetic immunisation might have been hastily underestimated based on overall immunogenicity data in humans and lack of parallelism with other, more classical immunisation methods. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using malaria Liver Stage Antigen-3 (LSA-3), we report that genetic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pierre Daubersies, Benjamin Ollomo, Jean-Pierre Sauzet, Karima Brahimi, Blanca-Liliana Perlaza, Wijnand Eling, Hubert Moukana, Pierre Rouquet, Charles de Taisne, Pierre Druilhe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2441826?pdf=render
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Summary:BACKGROUND: The true interest of genetic immunisation might have been hastily underestimated based on overall immunogenicity data in humans and lack of parallelism with other, more classical immunisation methods. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using malaria Liver Stage Antigen-3 (LSA-3), we report that genetic immunization induces in chimpanzees, the closest relative of humans, immune responses which are as scarce as those reported using other DNA vaccines in humans, but which nonetheless confer strong, sterile and reproducible protection. The pattern was consistent in 3/4 immunized apes against two high dose sporozoite challenges performed as late as 98 and 238 days post-immunization and by a heterologous strain. CONCLUSIONS: These results should, in our opinion, lead to a revisiting of the value of this unusual means of immunisation, using as a model a disease, malaria, in which virulent challenges of volunteers are ethically acceptable.
ISSN:1932-6203