Antigens Induced on Erythrocytes by P. falciparum : Expression of Diverse and Conserved Determinants
- 10 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 231 (4734) , 150-153
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.2417315
Abstract
Red blood cells that are infected with the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum express new antigens on their surface. In a study of these antigens in the erythrocytes of naturally infected children in the Gambia, an antibody-mediated agglutination assay revealed an extreme degree of antigenic diversity. Serum samples from each of ten children in the convalescent stage of malaria infection reacted with infected cells from the same child but generally not with infected cells from the other children. The Gambian children's erythrocytes also expressed shared determinants: sera from Gambian adults often reacted with the surface of infected cells from all of the children and were shown by adsorption and elution experiments to contain antibodies that recognized several isolates. Conserved determinants exposed on infected erythrocytes may be important for development of antimalarial immunity either naturally or through vaccination.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selective stage-specific changes in the permeability to small hydrophilic solutes of human erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium falciparumMolecular and Biochemical Parasitology, 1985
- Knob-positive and knob-negative Plasmodium falciparum differ in expression of a strain-specific malarial antigen on the surface of infected erythrocytes.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1984
- Identification of a strain-specific malarial antigen exposed on the surface of Plasmodium falciparum-infected erythrocytes.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1984
- Plasmodium falciparum strain-specific antibody blocks binding of infected erythrocytes to amelanotic melanoma cellsNature, 1983
- Surface alterations of erythrocytes in Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Antigenic variation, antigenic diversity, and the role of the spleen.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1983
- Calcium transport of Plasmodium chabaudi-infected erythrocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- Falciparum Malaria-Infected Erythrocytes Specifically Bind to Cultured Human Endothelial CellsScience, 1981
- Immune phagocytosis in murine malaria.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1979
- Human Malaria Parasites in Continuous CultureScience, 1976
- Alterations of red blood cell sodium transport during malarial infectionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969