pubmed:abstractText |
Antigens, circulating in the blood during malarial infections, have been implicated in immune protection, immunosuppression, and immune-complex formation. We used a monoclonal antibody (MAb 7H8) to identify an antigen (Ag-7H8) in the sera of mice infected with Plasmodium yoelii. The major form of the antigen has a molecular weight of approximately 120,000 in P. yoelii, with minor components of 220,000; 65,000 to 75,000; and 45,000. Ag-7H8 remains antigenic after boiling for 5 min. A two-sited assay was developed with MAb 7H8 that demonstrated that the Ag-7H8 has at least two similar epitopes per molecule. The two-sited assay was used to follow Ag-7H8 in the blood of mice during lethal (strain 17XL) and nonlethal (strain 17XNL) P. yoelii infections. Ag-7H8 appeared on days 6 and 7 after infection with 10(6) and 10(4) 17XL P. yoelii parasites, respectively, and remained until the animals died. It was in plasma samples between days 6 and 14 after 17XNL P. yoelii injections in several inbred strains of mice, regardless of the course of parasitemia. Thus, the kinetics of antigenemia correspond with early stages of infection and not with the number of circulating parasites. Indirect immunofluorescence assays demonstrated that MAb 7H8 detects a cross-reactive antigen in other malarial parasites, including Plasmodium berghei and Plasmodium falciparum. Thus, this two-sited assay may have general application for the serodiagnosis of malaria and may be beneficial in determining the relationship of circulating antigens to malarial immunity.
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