Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection

The fight against malaria has proven a challenging one. Despite decades of research and a multitude of immunization strategies we still have not been able to produce a safe and efficacious vaccine. Nevertheless, trials with the most advanced vaccine to date, RTS,S, have demonstrated that small, incr...

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Main Author: McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva
Other Authors: Ruedl Christiane
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139653
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1396532023-02-28T18:37:59Z Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva Ruedl Christiane School of Biological Sciences A*STAR Singapore Immunology Network Laurent Rénia renia_laurent@immunol.a-star.edu.sg, Ruedl@ntu.edu.sg Science::Biological sciences::Microbiology::Immunology The fight against malaria has proven a challenging one. Despite decades of research and a multitude of immunization strategies we still have not been able to produce a safe and efficacious vaccine. Nevertheless, trials with the most advanced vaccine to date, RTS,S, have demonstrated that small, incremental iterations such as the use of ideal adjuvants, could significantly bolster the effectiveness of promising candidates. We explored two novel mechanisms of inducing immunological responses against severe malaria. The first one is based on sub-unit vaccination and studies the potential use of thermogel polymers as adjuvants. The second one uses vaccination with a live attenuated C. albicans strain and tests whether trained immunity can protect against lethal malaria challenge. While we demonstrated that the used thermogel polymers as adjuvants were capable of protecting BALB/cJ mice from lethal PyYM challenge, comparison of parasitemia curves and antibody titers revealed that this protection was lower than that induced when using Freund’s adjuvant. While a broad association between antibody titers and survival was observed in our model, we did not find correlation between survival and antibody-mediated mechanisms such as opsonic phagocytosis or inhibition of invasion in vitro. The attenuated C albicans strain R24 has been previously shown to induce protective innate immune responses against heterologous bacterial and fungal challenges. Using R24 as a live attenuated vaccine we established that while vaccination with R24 appeared ineffective against PyYM challenge, it protected C57BL/6J from experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) induced by P. berhei ANKA. Moreover we were able to determine that protection against ECM was due to reduced cross-presentation by endothelial cells in the brain while the number of sequestered iRBC and parasite-specific CD8+T cells remained the same. Doctor of Philosophy 2020-05-20T12:52:37Z 2020-05-20T12:52:37Z 2019 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy McGuire, D. R. d. S. (2019). Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139653 10.32657/10356/139653 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences::Microbiology::Immunology
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences::Microbiology::Immunology
McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva
Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
description The fight against malaria has proven a challenging one. Despite decades of research and a multitude of immunization strategies we still have not been able to produce a safe and efficacious vaccine. Nevertheless, trials with the most advanced vaccine to date, RTS,S, have demonstrated that small, incremental iterations such as the use of ideal adjuvants, could significantly bolster the effectiveness of promising candidates. We explored two novel mechanisms of inducing immunological responses against severe malaria. The first one is based on sub-unit vaccination and studies the potential use of thermogel polymers as adjuvants. The second one uses vaccination with a live attenuated C. albicans strain and tests whether trained immunity can protect against lethal malaria challenge. While we demonstrated that the used thermogel polymers as adjuvants were capable of protecting BALB/cJ mice from lethal PyYM challenge, comparison of parasitemia curves and antibody titers revealed that this protection was lower than that induced when using Freund’s adjuvant. While a broad association between antibody titers and survival was observed in our model, we did not find correlation between survival and antibody-mediated mechanisms such as opsonic phagocytosis or inhibition of invasion in vitro. The attenuated C albicans strain R24 has been previously shown to induce protective innate immune responses against heterologous bacterial and fungal challenges. Using R24 as a live attenuated vaccine we established that while vaccination with R24 appeared ineffective against PyYM challenge, it protected C57BL/6J from experimental cerebral malaria (ECM) induced by P. berhei ANKA. Moreover we were able to determine that protection against ECM was due to reduced cross-presentation by endothelial cells in the brain while the number of sequestered iRBC and parasite-specific CD8+T cells remained the same.
author2 Ruedl Christiane
author_facet Ruedl Christiane
McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva
author_sort McGuire, Daniel Ribeiro da Silva
title Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
title_short Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
title_full Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
title_fullStr Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
title_full_unstemmed Studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
title_sort studies on the immunological mechanisms leading to protection or pathology during malaria infection
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139653
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