Cargando…
Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites
BACKGROUND: Human populations exposed to low malaria transmission present particular severe risks of malaria morbidity and mortality. In addition, in a context of low-level exposure to Anopheles vector, conventional entomological methods used for sampling Anopheles populations are insufficiently sen...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BioMed Central
2009
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2733152/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19674487 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-198 |
_version_ | 1782171094975774720 |
---|---|
author | Poinsignon, Anne Cornelie, Sylvie Ba, Fatou Boulanger, Denis Sow, Cheikh Rossignol, Marie Sokhna, Cheikh Cisse, Badara Simondon, François Remoue, Franck |
author_facet | Poinsignon, Anne Cornelie, Sylvie Ba, Fatou Boulanger, Denis Sow, Cheikh Rossignol, Marie Sokhna, Cheikh Cisse, Badara Simondon, François Remoue, Franck |
author_sort | Poinsignon, Anne |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Human populations exposed to low malaria transmission present particular severe risks of malaria morbidity and mortality. In addition, in a context of low-level exposure to Anopheles vector, conventional entomological methods used for sampling Anopheles populations are insufficiently sensitive and probably under-estimate the real risk of malaria transmission. The evaluation of antibody (Ab) responses to arthropod salivary proteins constitutes a novel tool for estimating exposure level to insect bites. In the case of malaria, a recent study has shown that human IgG responses to the gSG6-P1 peptide represented a specific biomarker of exposure to Anopheles gambiae bites. The objective of this study was to investigate if this biomarker can be used to estimate low-level exposure of individuals to Anopheles vector. METHODS: The IgG Ab level to gSG6-P1 was evaluated at the peak and at the end of the An. gambiae exposure season in children living in Senegalese villages, where the Anopheles density was estimated to be very low by classical entomological trapping but where malaria transmission occurred during the studied season. RESULTS: Specific IgG responses to gSG6-P1 were observed in children exposed to very low-level of Anopheles bites. In addition, a significant increase in the specific IgG Ab level was observed during the Anopheles exposure season whereas classical entomological data have reported very few or no Anopheles during the studied period. Furthermore, this biomarker may also be applicable to evaluate the heterogeneity of individual exposure. CONCLUSION: The results strengthen the hypothesis that the evaluation of IgG responses to gSG6-P1 during the season of exposure could reflect the real human contact with anthropophilic Anopheles and suggest that this biomarker of low exposure could be used at the individual level. This promising immuno-epidemiological marker could represent a useful tool to assess the risk to very low exposure to malaria vectors as observed in seasonal, urban, altitude or travellers contexts. In addition, this biomarker could be used for the surveillance survey after applying anti-vector strategy. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2733152 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2009 |
publisher | BioMed Central |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-27331522009-08-28 Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites Poinsignon, Anne Cornelie, Sylvie Ba, Fatou Boulanger, Denis Sow, Cheikh Rossignol, Marie Sokhna, Cheikh Cisse, Badara Simondon, François Remoue, Franck Malar J Research BACKGROUND: Human populations exposed to low malaria transmission present particular severe risks of malaria morbidity and mortality. In addition, in a context of low-level exposure to Anopheles vector, conventional entomological methods used for sampling Anopheles populations are insufficiently sensitive and probably under-estimate the real risk of malaria transmission. The evaluation of antibody (Ab) responses to arthropod salivary proteins constitutes a novel tool for estimating exposure level to insect bites. In the case of malaria, a recent study has shown that human IgG responses to the gSG6-P1 peptide represented a specific biomarker of exposure to Anopheles gambiae bites. The objective of this study was to investigate if this biomarker can be used to estimate low-level exposure of individuals to Anopheles vector. METHODS: The IgG Ab level to gSG6-P1 was evaluated at the peak and at the end of the An. gambiae exposure season in children living in Senegalese villages, where the Anopheles density was estimated to be very low by classical entomological trapping but where malaria transmission occurred during the studied season. RESULTS: Specific IgG responses to gSG6-P1 were observed in children exposed to very low-level of Anopheles bites. In addition, a significant increase in the specific IgG Ab level was observed during the Anopheles exposure season whereas classical entomological data have reported very few or no Anopheles during the studied period. Furthermore, this biomarker may also be applicable to evaluate the heterogeneity of individual exposure. CONCLUSION: The results strengthen the hypothesis that the evaluation of IgG responses to gSG6-P1 during the season of exposure could reflect the real human contact with anthropophilic Anopheles and suggest that this biomarker of low exposure could be used at the individual level. This promising immuno-epidemiological marker could represent a useful tool to assess the risk to very low exposure to malaria vectors as observed in seasonal, urban, altitude or travellers contexts. In addition, this biomarker could be used for the surveillance survey after applying anti-vector strategy. BioMed Central 2009-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2733152/ /pubmed/19674487 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-198 Text en Copyright © 2009 Poinsignon et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Research Poinsignon, Anne Cornelie, Sylvie Ba, Fatou Boulanger, Denis Sow, Cheikh Rossignol, Marie Sokhna, Cheikh Cisse, Badara Simondon, François Remoue, Franck Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title | Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title_full | Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title_fullStr | Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title_full_unstemmed | Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title_short | Human IgG response to a salivary peptide, gSG6-P1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to Anopheles bites |
title_sort | human igg response to a salivary peptide, gsg6-p1, as a new immuno-epidemiological tool for evaluating low-level exposure to anopheles bites |
topic | Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2733152/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19674487 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-8-198 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT poinsignonanne humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT corneliesylvie humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT bafatou humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT boulangerdenis humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT sowcheikh humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT rossignolmarie humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT sokhnacheikh humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT cissebadara humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT simondonfrancois humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites AT remouefranck humaniggresponsetoasalivarypeptidegsg6p1asanewimmunoepidemiologicaltoolforevaluatinglowlevelexposuretoanophelesbites |