Plasmodium vivax VIR Proteins are Targets of Naturally-Acquired Antibody and T cell Immune Responses to Malaria in Pregnant Women (Raw data)

DOI

P. vivax infection during pregnancy has been associated with poor outcomes such as anemia, low birth weight and congenital malaria, thus representing an important global health problem. However, no vaccine is currently available for its prevention. Vir genes were the first putative virulent factors associated with P. vivax infections, yet very few studies have examined their potential role as targets of immunity. We investigated the immunogenic properties of five VIR proteins and two long synthetic peptides containing conserved VIR sequences (PvLP1 and PvLP2) in the context of the PregVax cohort study including women from five malaria endemic countries: Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, India and Papua New Guinea (PNG) at different timepoints during and after pregnancy. Antibody responses against all antigens were detected in all populations, with PNG women presenting the highest levels overall. P. vivax infection at sample collection time was positively associated with antibody levels against PvLP1 (fold-increase: 1.60 at recruitment -first antenatal visit-) and PvLP2 (fold-increase: 1.63 at delivery), and P. falciparum co-infection was found to increase those responses (for PvLP1 at recruitment, fold-increase: 2.25). Levels of IgG against two VIR proteins at delivery were associated with higher birth weight (27 g increase per duplicating antibody levels, p<0.5). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from PNG uninfected pregnant women had significantly higher antigen-specific IFN-g TH1 responses (p=0.006) and secreted less pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF and IL-6 after PvLP2 stimulation than P. vivax-infected women (p<0.5). These data demonstrate that VIR antigens induce the natural acquisition of antibody and T cell memory responses that might be important in immunity to P. vivax during pregnancy in very diverse geographical settings.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.34810/data66
Related Identifier IsCitedBy https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005009
Metadata Access https://dataverse.csuc.cat/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=doi:10.34810/data66
Provenance
Creator Adriana Malheiros; Alexandra J. Umbers; Alfredo Gabriel Mayor Aparicio ORCID logo; Azucena Bardají ORCID logo; Camila Botto Menezes ORCID logo; Carlo Severini ORCID logo; Carlota Dobaño ORCID logo; Carmen Fernández-Becerra ORCID logo; Chetan E. Chitnis ORCID logo; Clara Menéndez ORCID logo; Dhanpat K. Kochar; Dhiraj Hans; Edmilson Rui; Flor E. Martínez Espinosa ORCID logo; Francesca Mateo González ORCID logo; Hernando A. del Portillo Obando ORCID logo; Ivo Mueller ORCID logo; Maria Eugenia Castellanos ORCID logo; Maria Ome-Kaius; Meghna Desai ORCID logo; Michela Menegon; Myriam Arévalo Herrera ORCID logo; Norma Padilla ORCID logo; Pilar Requena ORCID logo; Regina A. Wangnapi; Sanjay K. Kochar; Sergi Sanz ORCID logo; Stephen John Rogerson ORCID logo; Swati Kochar
Publisher CORA.Repositori de Dades de Recerca
Contributor UBIOESGD
Publication Year 2022
Rights CC BY-NC-SA 4.0; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
OpenAccess true
Contact UBIOESGD (Barcelona Institute for Global Health)
Representation
Resource Type Clinical data; Dataset
Format text/csv; text/plain
Size 75347; 1139259; 7123
Version 3.1
Discipline Life Sciences; Medicine