A principal target of human immunity to malaria identified by molecular population genetic and immunological analyses
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Abstract
New strategies are required to identify the most important targets
of protective immunity in complex eukaryotic pathogens.
Natural selection maintains allelic variation in some antigens of
the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum (1–3). Analysis of allele
frequency distributions could identify the loci under most intense
selection (4–7). The merozoite surface protein 1 (Msp1) is the
most-abundant surface component on the erythrocyte-invading
stage of P. falciparum (8–10). Immunization with whole Msp1
has protected monkeys completely against homologous (11) and
partially against non-homologous (12) parasite strains. The singlecopy
msp1 gene, of about 5 kilobases, has highly divergent alleles (13)
with stable frequencies in endemic populations (14,15). To
identify the region of msp1 under strongest selection to maintain
alleles within populations, we studied multiple intragenic
sequence loci in populations in different regions of Africa and
Southeast Asia. On both continents, the locus with the lowest
inter-population variance in allele frequencies was block 2, indicating
selection in this part of the gene. To test the hypothesis
of immune selection, we undertook a large prospective longitudinal
cohort study. This demonstrated that serum IgG antibodies
against each of the two most frequent allelic types of block 2
of the protein were strongly associated with protection from P.
falciparum malaria.
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