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Infection and Immunity, November 1998, p. 5329-5336, Vol. 66, No. 11
Department of Tropical Medicine, University
of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii 96816
Received 2 March 1998/Returned for modification 27 May
1998/Accepted 14 August 1998
Vaccine adjuvants exert critical and unique influences on the
quality of immune responses induced during active immunizations. We
investigated the mechanisms of action of immunological adjuvants in
terms of their requirements for cytokine-mediated pathways for
adjuvanticity. Antibody responses potentiated by several adjuvants to a Plasmodium falciparum MSP1-19 (C-terminal 19-kDa
processing fragment of MSP1) vaccine were studied in gamma interferon
(IFN-
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Pathways for Potentiation of Immunogenicity during
Adjuvant-Assisted Immunizations with Plasmodium falciparum
Major Merozoite Surface Protein 1
) or interleukin (IL-4) knockout mice. The levels of
anti-MSP1-19 antibodies and the induction of Th1- and Th2-type
antibodies were analyzed. Results revealed a spectrum of
requirements for cytokine-mediated pathways in the potentiation
of immunogenicity, and such requirements were influenced by
interactions among individual components of the adjuvant formulations.
One adjuvant strictly depended on IFN-
to induce appreciable
levels of anti-MSP1-19 antibodies, while some formulations required
IFN-
only for the induction of Th1-type antibodies. Other
formulations induced exclusively Th2-type antibodies and were not
affected by IFN-
knockout. There were three patterns of requirements
for IL-4 by various adjuvants in the induction of Th2-type anti-MSP1-19
antibodies. Moreover, the induction of Th1-type anti-MSP1-19 antibodies
by adjuvants showed two distinct patterns of regulation by IL-4. The
utilization of an IL-4 regulated pathway(s) for the induction of
Th2-type antibodies by the same adjuvant differed between mouse
strains, suggesting that animal species variability in responses to
vaccine adjuvants may be due, at least in part, to differences in the
utilization of immune system pathways by an adjuvant among animal
hosts.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Tropical Medicine, Leahi Hospital, 3675 Kilauea Ave., Honolulu, HI
96816. Phone: (808) 732-1477. Fax: (808) 732-1483. E-mail:
ghui{at}hawaii.edu.
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