Towards a synthetic malaria vaccine: cyclization of a peptide eliminates the production of parasite-unreactive antibody.
Journal: 1993/July - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
ISSN: 0962-8436
Abstract:
In a previous study, human beings were vaccinated with a P. falciparum malaria vaccine candidate consisting of tetanus toxoid coupled to linear (Asn-Ala-Asn-Pro)3 ((NANP)3). The vaccine initiated protection in some people, but some individuals mainly produced anti-peptide antibodies that did not react with the pathogen. A likely contributor to the formation of epitopes that give rise to pathogen-unreactive antibodies is the free terminal proline which is not a terminal residue in the native protein. To avoid the elicitation of antibodies against terminal epitopes, (NANP)3 was cyclized. In contrast to monoclonal antibodies to the linear peptide where 35% were unreactive with the parasite, all monoclonal antibodies to the cyclized peptide were found to react with the parasite.
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