npj Vaccines (Aug 2017)

A defined subunit vaccine that protects against vector-borne visceral leishmaniasis

  • Malcolm S. Duthie,
  • Lais Pereira,
  • Michelle Favila,
  • Kimberly A. Hofmeyer,
  • S. Jim Reed,
  • Sonia Metangmo,
  • Shannon Townsend,
  • John D. Laurance,
  • Alessandro Picone,
  • Ayesha Misquith,
  • Faria Hossain,
  • Prakash Ghosh,
  • Md Anik Ashfaq Khan,
  • Jeffery Guderian,
  • H. Remy Bailor,
  • Hong Liang,
  • Julie Vergara,
  • Fabiano Oliveira,
  • Randall F. Howard,
  • Shaden Kamhawi,
  • Dinesh Mondal,
  • Rhea N. Coler,
  • Jesus G. Valenzuela,
  • Steven G. Reed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-017-0025-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Leishmaniasis: Improved vaccine candidate demonstrates protection A research collaboration between the United States and Bangladesh has improved its own vaccine candidate and demonstrated it to be effective. The vaccine’s target, visceral leishmaniasis, is a deadly parasitic disease transmitted via the bites of sandflies. The collaboration, led by Steven Reed of the United States’ Infectious Disease Research Institute, previously developed a vaccine that presents two parasite-derived proteins (antigens) to a host’s immune system, allowing it to build a defense. The new vaccine candidate contains three antigens and has shown to confer disease resistance to hamsters who were subsequently exposed to infected sandflies. This is the first time a vaccine for visceral leishmaniasis has stood up in tests where the host has been infected through natural methods, which inspires confidence in the vaccine’s capacity to work in the wild.