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Afucosylated Plasmodium falciparum-specific IgG is induced by infection but not by subunit vaccination.

Mads Delbo LarsenMary Lopez-PerezEmmanuel Kakra DicksonPaulina AmpomahNicaise Tuikue NdamJan NoutaCarolien A M KoelemanAgnes L Hipgrave EderveenBenjamin MordmüllerAli SalantiMorten Agertoug NielsenAchille MassougbodjiC Ellen van der SchootMichael F OforiDana L E VergoossenLars HviidGestur Vidarsson
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein 1 (PfEMP1) family members mediate receptor- and tissue-specific sequestration of infected erythrocytes (IEs) in malaria. Antibody responses are a central component of naturally acquired malaria immunity. PfEMP1-specific IgG likely protects by inhibiting IE sequestration and through IgG-Fc Receptor (FcγR) mediated phagocytosis and killing of antibody-opsonized IEs. The affinity of afucosylated IgG to FcγRIIIa is up to 40-fold higher than fucosylated IgG, resulting in enhanced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Most IgG in plasma is fully fucosylated, but afucosylated IgG is elicited in response to enveloped viruses and to paternal alloantigens during pregnancy. Here we show that naturally acquired PfEMP1-specific IgG is strongly afucosylated in a stable and exposure-dependent manner, and efficiently induces FcγRIIIa-dependent natural killer (NK) cell degranulation. In contrast, immunization with a subunit PfEMP1 (VAR2CSA) vaccine results in fully fucosylated specific IgG. These results have implications for understanding protective natural- and vaccine-induced immunity to malaria.
Keyphrases
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • signaling pathway
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • diabetic rats
  • contrast enhanced
  • drug induced