A CAF01-adjuvanted whole asexual blood-stage liposomal malaria vaccine induces a CD4+ T-cell-dependent strain-transcending protective immunity in rodent models

mBio. 2023 Nov 14;14(6):e0254723. doi: 10.1128/mbio.02547-23. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Malaria is a devastating disease that has claimed many lives, especially children <5 years of age in Sub-Saharan Africa, as documented in World Malaria Reports by WHO. Even though vector control and chemoprevention tools have helped with elimination efforts in some, if not all, endemic areas, these efforts have been hampered by serious issues (including drug and insecticide resistance and disruption to social cohesion caused by the COVID-19 pandemic). Development of an effective malaria vaccine is the alternative preventative tool in the fight against malaria. Vaccines save millions of lives each year and have helped in elimination and/or eradication of global diseases. Development of a highly efficacious malaria vaccine that will ensure long-lasting protective immunity will be a "game-changing" prevention strategy to finally eradicate the disease. Such a vaccine will need to counteract the significant obstacles that have been hampering subunit vaccine development to date, including antigenic polymorphism, sub-optimal immunogenicity, and waning vaccine efficacy.

Keywords: CAF01 adjuvanted; liposomes; malaria; vaccine; whole blood stage.