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Clinical Trial
. 2000 Nov;182(5):1486-96.
doi: 10.1086/315871. Epub 2000 Oct 9.

Synthetic malaria peptide vaccine elicits high levels of antibodies in vaccinees of defined HLA genotypes

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Clinical Trial

Synthetic malaria peptide vaccine elicits high levels of antibodies in vaccinees of defined HLA genotypes

E H Nardin et al. J Infect Dis. 2000 Nov.

Abstract

A multiple antigen peptide (MAP) malaria vaccine containing minimal Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein repeat epitopes was assessed for safety and immunogenicity in volunteers of known class II genotypes. The MAP/alum/QS-21 vaccine formulation elicited high levels of parasite-specific antibodies in 10 of 12 volunteers expressing DQB1*0603, DRB1*0401, or DRB1*1101 class II molecules. In contrast, volunteers of other HLA genotypes were low responders or nonresponders. A second study of 7 volunteers confirmed the correlation of class II genotype and high responder phenotype. This is the first demonstration in humans that a peptide vaccine containing minimal T and B cell epitopes composed of only 5 amino acids (N, A, V, D, and P) can elicit antibody titers comparable to multiple exposures to irradiated P. falciparum-infected mosquitoes. Moreover, the high-responder phenotypes were predicted by analysis of peptide/HLA interactions in vitro, thus facilitating the rational design of epitope-based peptide vaccines for malaria, as well as for other pathogens.

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