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Infect Immun. 1985 June; 48(3): 839-842

Biologically active antibodies elicited by a synthetic circumsporozoite peptide of Plasmodium knowlesi administered in saline with a muramyl dipeptide derivative.

E R Clough, F M Audibert, J W Barnwell, D H Schlesinger, R Arnon and L A Chedid

ABSTRACT

A synthetic peptide whose sequence was derived from the circumsporozoite protein of Plasmodium knowlesi coupled to bovine gamma globulin has been shown to be immunogenic when administered with Freund complete adjuvant. The present experiments were designed to test the immunogenicity of the peptide when attached to a tetanus toxoid carrier and administered with alum or murabutide, both acceptable clinical adjuvants. In both cases, the use of an adjuvant increased the levels of circulating anti-peptide antibodies over those observed when no adjuvant was used. However, when the antisera were tested for reactivity with the native protein, animals of the group receiving the conjugate associated with murabutide always had titers greatly exceeding those observed in animals that received the conjugate with alum. Moreover, the sera of the murabutide-treated group were shown to be more active in eliciting shedding of the circumsporozoite protein than were sera of animals of the Freund complete adjuvant-treated group. The use of tetanus toxoid in secondary immunizations could be eliminated when the mice primed with peptide-tetanus toxoid and murabutide were boosted with a polymer of the peptide. The results indicate that the synthetic malarial peptide-tetanus toxoid conjugate is capable of stimulating high levels of biologically active antibodies only when administered with murabutide.


Infect Immun. 1985 June; 48(3): 839-842







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