Publications by authors named "E Kabyemela"

Background: Despite decades of effort, malaria remains a leading killer of children. The absence of a highly effective vaccine and the emergence of parasites resistant to both diagnosis as well as treatment hamper effective public health interventions.

Methods And Results: To discover new vaccine candidates, we used our whole proteome differential screening method and identified PfGBP130 as a parasite protein uniquely recognized by antibodies from children who had developed resistance to infection but not from those who remained susceptible.

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Fetal anemia is common in malaria-endemic areas and a risk factor for anemia as well as mortality during infancy. Placental malaria (PM) and red cell abnormalities have been proposed as possible etiologies, but the relationship between PM and fetal anemia has varied in earlier studies, and the role of red cell abnormalities has not been studied in malaria-endemic areas. In a Tanzanian birth cohort study designed to elucidate the pathogenesis of severe malaria in young infants, we performed a cross-sectional analysis of risk factors for fetal anemia.

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Malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum remains the leading single-agent cause of mortality in children, yet the promise of an effective vaccine has not been fulfilled. Here, using our previously described differential screening method to analyse the proteome of blood-stage P. falciparum parasites, we identify P.

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Background: We evaluated whether maternally-derived antibodies to a malarial vaccine candidate, Plasmodium falciparum Schizont Egress Antigen-1 (PfSEA-1), in cord blood interfered with the development of infant anti-PfSEA-1 antibodies in response to natural exposure.

Methods: We followed 630 Tanzanian infants who were measured their antibodies against PfSEA-1 (aa 810-1023; PfSEA-1A) at birth and 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of age, and examined the changes in anti-PfSEA-1A antibody levels in response to parasitemia, and evaluated whether maternally-derived anti-PfSEA-1A antibodies in cord blood modified infant anti-PfSEA-1A immune responses.

Results: Infants who experienced parasitemia during the first 6 months of life had significantly higher anti-PfSEA-1A antibodies at 6 and 12 months of age compared to uninfected infants.

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Background: In holoendemic areas, children suffer the most from Plasmodium falciparum malaria, yet newborns and young infants express a relative resistance to both infection and severe malarial disease (SM). This relative resistance has been ascribed to maternally-derived anti-parasite immunoglobulin G; however, the targets of these protective antibodies remain elusive.

Methods: We enrolled 647 newborns at birth from a malaria-holoendemic region of Tanzania.

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