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Infect Immun, August 1998, p. 3884-3891, Vol. 66, No. 8
Department of Biology, Imperial College of
Science, Technology and Medicine, London, United
Kingdom,1 and
Department of
Parasitology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Leiden, Leiden, The
Netherlands2
Received 7 January 1998/Returned for modification 19 February
1998/Accepted 13 May 1998
Pbs21 is a surface protein of the ookinete of Plasmodium
berghei, which can induce a potent transmission-blocking immune
response. Pbs21 is normally expressed only by parasite stages in the
mosquito, i.e., female gametes/zygotes, ookinetes, and oocysts.
However, the Pbs21 gene is transcribed in female gametocytes which
circulate in the bloodstream of the host, where translation of the
resulting mRNA is totally repressed. Episomal transfection has been
used to investigate whether expression of Pbs21 protein could be
achieved in blood stages of the parasite. By using plasmid pMD221, the complete mRNA-encoding region of Pbs21, flanked only by 218 nucleotides (nt) of its promoter region and 438 nt of its 3' region downstream from
the polyadenylation site, was introduced into the blood stages of
gametocyte-producing and non-gametocyte-producing clones of P. berghei. In both of these transformed parasite lines, Pbs21 protein was expressed in asexual trophozoites, schizonts, and, when
present, in both male and female gametocytes. Hence, the flanking
regions present are sufficient to allow transcription but lack the
elements that exert natural control of sex- and stage-specific transcription. The mRNA and the protein expressed by transformed blood
stages were indistinguishable from the wild-type forms by the criteria
tested, and the protein was recognized by both conformation-dependent and conformation-independent monoclonal antibodies raised against native Pbs21. In mice infected with transformed
non-gametocyte-producing parasites, a Pbs21-specific immune response
was induced and characterized with respect to isotype (IgG2a/IgG2b) and
quantity (11.5 ± 10 µg/ml) of antibody produced. However, as
found in previous studies, these antibody levels were insufficient to
inhibit development of the parasites in the mosquito. The ability to
express mosquito midgut-stage antigens in blood-stage parasites will
facilitate further investigations of molecular and immunological
properties of these proteins.
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Transgenic Expression of a Mosquito-Stage Malarial Protein,
Pbs21, in Blood Stages of Transformed Plasmodium berghei
and Induction of an Immune Response upon Infection
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biology, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, Prince Consort Rd., London SW7 2BB, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-171-5945425. Fax: 44-171-5945424. E-mail: gma{at}ic.ac.uk.
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