Malarial Antibody Detection with an Engineered Yeast Agglutination Assay.

ACS synthetic biology(2022)

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摘要
Malaria, a disease caused by the parasite carried by mosquitoes, is commonly diagnosed by microscopy of peripheral blood smears and with rapid diagnostic tests. Both methods show limited detection of low parasitemia that may maintain transmission and hinder malaria elimination. We have developed a novel agglutination assay in which modified cells act as antigen-displaying bead-like particles to capture malaria antibodies. The Epidermal Growth Factor-1 like domain (EGF1) of the merozoite surface protein-1 (PfMSP-1) was displayed on the yeast surface and shown to be capable of binding antimalaria antibodies. Mixed with a second yeast strain displaying the Z domain of Protein A from and allowed to settle in a round-bottomed well, the yeast produce a visually distinctive agglutination test result: a tight "button" at a low level of malarial antibodies, and a diffuse "sheet" when higher antibody levels are present. Positive agglutination results were observed in malaria-positive human serum to a serum dilution of 1:100 to 1:125. Since the yeast cells are inexpensive to produce, the test may be amenable to local production in regions seeking malaria surveillance information to guide their elimination programs.
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