Article
作者: Chan, Sidney ; Ivanochko, Danton ; Miura, Kazutoyo ; MacGill, Randall S ; King, Neil P ; Julien, Jean-Philippe ; Teelen, Karina ; Huang, Wei-Chiao ; Song, Yiting ; Stoter, Rianne ; Men, Christine ; van Gemert, Geert-Jan ; Shiu, Carol ; Lovell, Jonathan F ; Long, Carole A ; Leaf, Elizabeth M ; Ravichandran, Rashmi ; Semesi, Anthony ; Hailemariam, Sophia ; Jore, Matthijs M
Abstract:
Malaria parasite transmission remains a barrier to elimination since asymptomatic individuals sustain the infectious reservoir. Transmission-blocking vaccine (TBV) candidates targeting
Plasmodium falciparum
(Pf) gametocyte surface proteins Pfs230 and Pfs48/45 have shown promise in clinical trials. Several vaccine candidates have been developed for these antigens, yet it is unclear which elicit the most robust and durable transmission-blocking responses. From structure-function relationships of monoclonal antibodies in complex with both antigens, we report the development of a stabilized tandem antigen chimera (STAC), which presents the most potent epitopes from Pfs230 domain 1 (Pfs230-D1) and Pfs48/45 domain 3 (Pfs48/45-D3) in a single construct, while masking non-functional epitopes using an engineered pseudo-native domain disposition. Iterative structure-guided optimization improved antigen yields and stability, while nanoparticle-based multimerization enhanced the functional transmission-reducing activity elicited by the immunogen in female mice. Immunizations with STAC genetically conjugated to self-assembling protein nanoparticles elicited antibodies with potent transmission-reducing activity comparable or superior to the multimerized Pfs230-D1 and Pfs48/45-D3. These findings establish STAC as a promising next-generation TBV candidate to disrupt malaria transmission and accelerate elimination efforts. More broadly, our results support the engineering of highly ordered and stable multi-domain antigens in a single protein as a strategy for the cost-efficient development of multi-component vaccines.