Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T05:58:59.169Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Epitope mapping of Brugia malayi ALT-2 and the development of a multi-epitope vaccine for lymphatic filariasis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2016

J. Madhumathi
Affiliation:
Department of Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai-600036, India
P.R. Prince
Affiliation:
Centre for Biotechnology, Anna University, Chennai600025, India
D.N. Rao
Affiliation:
Department of Biochemistry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi110029, India
A.A. Karande
Affiliation:
Department of Biochemistry, Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Sevagram442102, India
M.V.R. Reddy
Affiliation:
Department of Biochemistry, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore560012, India
P. Kaliraj*
Affiliation:
Centre for Biotechnology, Anna University, Chennai600025, India
*
*Fax: +91 44 22352642 E-mail: pk.kaliraj@gmail.com

Abstract

Human lymphatic filariasis is a neglected tropical disease, causing permanent and long-term disability with severe immunopathology. Abundant larval transcript (ALT) plays a crucial role in parasite establishment in the host, due to its multi-faceted ability in host immune regulation. Although ALT protein is a key filarial target, its exact function is yet to be explored. Here, we report epitope mapping and a structural model of Brugia malayi ALT-2, leading to development of a multi-epitope vaccine. Structural analysis revealed that ALT represents unique parasitic defence proteins belonging to a toxin family that carries a ‘knottin’ fold. ALT-2 has been a favourite vaccine antigen and was protective in filarial models. Due to the immunological significance of ALT-2, we mapped B-cell epitopes systematically and identified two epitope clusters, 1–30 and 89–128. To explore the prophylactic potential of epitope clusters, a recombinant multi-epitopic gene comprising the epitopic domains was engineered and the protective efficacy of recombinant ALT epitope protein (AEP) was tested in the permissive model, Mastomys coucha. AEP elicited potent antibody responses with predominant IgG1 isotype and conferred significantly high protection (74.59%) compared to ALT-2 (61.95%). This proved that these epitopic domains are responsible for the protective efficacy of ALT-2 and engineering protective epitopes as a multi-epitope protein may be a novel vaccine strategy for complex parasitic infections.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abraham, D., Lange, A.M., Yutanawiboonchai, W., Trpis, M., Dickerson, J.W., Swenson, B. & Eberhard, M.L. (1993) Survival and development of larval Onchocerca volvulus in diffusion chambers implanted in primate and rodent hosts. Journal of Parasitology 79, 571582.Google Scholar
Allen, J.E., Daub, J., Guilliano, D., McDonnell, A., Lizotte-Waniewski, M., Taylor, D.W. & Blaxter, M. (2000) Analysis of genes expressed at the infective larval stage validates the utility of Litomosoides sigmodontis as a murine model for filarial vaccine development. Infection and Immunity 68, 54545458.Google Scholar
Anand, S.B., Murugan, V., Prabhu, P.R., Anandharaman, V., Reddy, M.V. & Kaliraj, P. (2008) Comparison of immunogenicity, protective efficacy of single and cocktail DNA vaccine of Brugia malayi abundant larval transcript (ALT-2) and thioredoxin peroxidase (TPX) in mice. Acta Tropica 7, 106112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnon, R., Tarrab-Hazdai, R. & Steward, M. (2000) A mimotope peptide-based vaccine against Schistosoma mansoni: synthesis and characterization. Immunology 101, 555562.Google Scholar
Ben-Yedidia, T. & Arnon, R. (1997) Design of peptide and polypeptide vaccines. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 8, 442448.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, S., Wery, M., Sharma, P. & Chauhan, V.S. (1995) A conserved peptide sequence of the Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein and antipeptide antibodies inhibit Plasmodium berghei sporozoite invasion of Hep-G2 cells and protect immunized mice against P. berghei sporozoite challenge. Infection and Immunity 63, 43754381.Google Scholar
Chenthamarakshan, V., Reddy, M.V. & Harinath, B.C. (1995) Immunoprophylactic potential of a 120 kDa Brugia malayi adult antigen fraction, BmA-2, in lymphatic filariasis. Parasite Immunology 17, 277285.Google Scholar
Colovos, C. & Yeates, T.O. (1993) Verification of protein structures: patterns of nonbonded atomic interactions. Protein Science 2, 15111519.Google Scholar
Dabir, S., Dabir, P., Goswami, K. & Reddy, M.V. (2008) Prophylactic evaluation of recombinant extracellular superoxide dismutase of Brugia malayi in jird model. Vaccine 26, 37053710.Google Scholar
Dong, X.N., Qi, Y., Ying, J., Chen, X. & Chen, Y.H. (2006) Candidate peptide vaccine induced potent protection against CSFV and identified a principal sequential neutralizing determinant on E2. Vaccine 24, 426434.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Emsley, P. & Cowtan, K. (2004) Coot: model-building tools for molecular graphics. Acta Crystallographica Section D: Biological Crystallography 60, 21262132.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fernandez-Fuentes, N., Rai, B.K., Madrid-Aliste, C.J., Fajardo, J.E. & Fiser, A. (2007) Comparative protein structure modeling by combining multiple templates and optimizing sequence-to-structure alignments. Bioinformatics 23, 25582565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fiser, A. & Sali, A. (2003) Modeller: generation and refinement of homology-based protein sequence models. Methods in Enzymology 374, 461491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gangatirkar, P., Gangadharan, S., Narendranath, A., Nagpal, S., Salunke, D.M. & Karande, A.A. (2002) Monoclonal antibodies to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) inhibit binding of the hormone to its receptor. Hybridoma and Hybridomics 21, 281286.Google Scholar
Gnanasekar, M., Rao, K.V., He, Y.X., Mishra, P.K., Nutman, T.B., Kaliraj, P. & Ramaswamy, K. (2004) Novel phage display-based subtractive screening to identify vaccine candidates of Brugia malayi . Infection and Immunity 72, 47074715.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gomez-Escobar, N., Bennett, C., Prieto-Lafuente, L., Aebischer, T., Blackburn, C.C. & Maizels, R.M. (2005) Heterologous expression of the filarial nematode alt gene products reveals their potential to inhibit immune function. BMC Biology 3, 8.Google Scholar
Gregory, W.F., Atmadja, A.K., Allen, J.E. & Maizels, R.M. (2000) The abundant larval transcript-1 and -2 genes of Brugia malayi encode stage-specific candidate vaccine antigens for filariasis. Infection and Immunity 68, 41744179.Google Scholar
Hoerauf, A., Satoguina, J., Saeftel, M. & Specht, S. (2005) Immunomodulation by filarial nematodes. Parasite Immunology 27, 417429.Google Scholar
Hotez, P.J. (2009) Mass drug administration and integrated control for the world's high-prevalence neglected tropical diseases. Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics 85, 659664.Google Scholar
Jameson, B.A. & Wolf, H. (1988) The antigenic index: a novel algorithm for predicting antigenic determinants. Computer Applications in the Biosciences 4, 181186.Google Scholar
Khan, A.A., Babu, J.P., Gupta, G. & Rao, D.N. (2008) Identifying B and T cell epitopes and studying humoral, mucosal and cellular immune response of V antigen of Yersinia pestis . Vaccine 26, 316332.Google Scholar
Khan, M.A., Gaur, R.L., Dixit, S., Saleemuddin, M. & Murthy, P.K. (2004) Responses of Mastomys coucha, that have been infected with Brugia malayi and treated with diethylcarbamazine or albendazole, to re-exposure to infection. Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 98, 817830.Google Scholar
Laskowski, R.A. (2001) PDBsum: summaries and analyses of PDB structures. Nucleic Acids Research 29, 221222.Google Scholar
Laskowski, R.A., MacArthur, M.W., Moss, D.S. & Thorton, J.M. (1993) PROCHECK: a program to check the stereochemical quality of protein structures. Journal of Applied Crystallography 26, 283291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lawrence, R.A. (2001) Immunity to filarial nematodes. Veterinary Parasitology 100, 3344.Google Scholar
Linding, R., Russell, R.B., Neduva, V. & Gibson, T.J. (2003) GlobPlot: Exploring protein sequences for globularity and disorder. Nucleic Acids Research 31, 37013708.Google Scholar
Lok, J.B. & Abraham, D. (1992) Animal models for the study of immunity in human filariasis. Parasitology Today 8, 168171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovell, S.C., Davis, I.W., Arendall, W.B 3rd, de Bakker, P.I., Word, J.M., Prisant, M.G., Richardson, J.S. & Richardson, D.C. (2003) Structure validation by Calpha geometry: phi, psi and Cbeta deviation. Proteins 50, 437450.Google Scholar
Madhumathi, J., Pradiba, D., Prince, P.R., Jeyaprita, P.J., Rao, D.N. & Kaliraj, P. (2010a) Crucial epitopes of Wuchereria bancrofti abundant larval transcript recognized in natural infection. European Journal of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 29, 14811486.Google Scholar
Madhumathi, J., Prince, P.R., Nageswara Rao, D. & Kaliraj, P. (2010b) Dominant T-cell epitopes of filarial BmALT-2 and their cytokine profile in BALB/c mice. Parasite Immunology 32, 760763.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McGuffin, L.J., Bryson, K. & Jones, D.T. (2000) The PSIPRED protein structure prediction server. Bioinformatics 16, 404405.Google Scholar
Nardin, E.H., Oliveira, G.A., Calvo-Calle, J.M. & Nussenzweig, R.S. (1995) The use of multiple antigen peptides in the analysis and induction of protective immune responses against infectious diseases. Advances in Immunology 60, 105149.Google Scholar
Nardin, E.H., Calvo-Calle, J.M., Oliveira, G.A., Nussenzweig, R.S., Schneider, M., Tiercy, J.M., Loutan, L., Hochstrasser, D. & Rose, K. (2001) A totally synthetic polyoxime malaria vaccine containing Plasmodium falciparum B cell and universal T cell epitopes elicits immune responses in volunteers of diverse HLA types. Journal of Immunology 166, 481489.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Niederhafner, P., Sebestík, J. & Jezek, J. (2005) Peptide dendrimers. Journal of Peptide Science 11, 757788.Google Scholar
Osborne, J. & Devaney, E. (1998) The L3 of Brugia induces a Th2-polarized response following activation of an IL-4-producing CD4-CD8- αβ T cell population. International Immunology 10, 15831590.Google Scholar
Perez-Iratxeta, C. & Andrade-Navarro, M.A. (2008) K2D2: estimation of protein secondary structure from circular dichroism spectra. BMC Structural Biology 8, 25.Google Scholar
Peters, B., Sidney, J., Bourne, P., Bui, H.H., Buus, S., Doh, G., Fleri, W., Kronenberg, M., Kubo, R., Lund, O., Nemazee, D., Ponomarenko, J.V., Sathiamurthy, M., Schoenberger, S., Stewart, S., Surko, P., Way, S., Wilson, S. & Sette, A. (2005) The design and implementation of the Immune Epitope Data Base and Analysis Resource. Immunogenetics 57, 326336.Google Scholar
Ramachandran, S., Kumar, M.P., Rami, R.M., Chinnaiah, H.B., Nutman, T., Kaliraj, P. & McCarthy, J. (2004) The larval specific lymphatic filarial ALT-2: induction of protection using protein or DNA vaccination. Microbiology and Immunology 48, 945955.Google Scholar
Saha, S. & Raghava, G.P.S. (2004) BcePred: prediction of continuous B-cell epitopes in antigenic sequences using physico-chemical properties, in ICARIS, G. Nicosia, V. Cutello, P. J. Bentley, and J. Timis, Eds., vol. 3239 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pp. 197–204, Springer, Berlin, Germany.Google Scholar
Sänger, I., Lämmler, G. & Kimmig, P. (1981) Filarial infections of Mastomys natalensis and their relevance for experimental chemotherapy. Acta Tropica 38, 277288.Google Scholar
Slabinski, L., Jaroszewski, L., Rychlewski, L., Wilson, I.A., Lesley, S.A. & Godzik, A. (2007) XtalPred: a web server for prediction of protein crystallizability. Bioinformatics 23, 34033405.Google Scholar
Söding, J. (2005) HHpred: Protein homology detection by HMM–HMM comparison. Bioinformatics 21, 951960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sokkar, P., Mohandass, S. & Ramachandran, M. (2011) Multiple templates-based homology modeling enhances structure quality of AT1 receptor: validation by molecular dynamics and antagonist docking. Journal of Molecular Modeling 17, 15651577.Google Scholar
Srinivasan, K.N., Brusic, V. & August, J.T. (2004) New technologies for vaccine development. Drug Development Research 62, 383392.Google Scholar
Suzuki, T. & Seregeg, I.G. (1979) A mass dissection technique for determining infectivity rate of filariasis vectors. Japanese Journal of Experimental Medicine 49, 117121.Google Scholar
Thirugnanam, S., Pandiaraja, P., Ramaswamy, K., Murugan, V., Gnanasekar, M., Nandakumar, K., Reddy, M.V. & Kaliraj, P. (2007) Brugia malayi: comparison of protective immune responses induced by Bm-alt-2 DNA, recombinant Bm-ALT-2 protein and prime-boost vaccine regimens in a jird model. Experimental Parasitology 116, 483491.Google Scholar
Vanam, U., Pandey, V., Prabhu, P.R., Dakshinamurthy, G., Reddy, M.V. & Kaliraj, P. (2009) Evaluation of immunoprophylactic efficacy of Brugia malayi transglutaminase (BmTGA) in single and multiple antigen vaccination with BmALT-2 and BmTPX for human lymphatic filariasis. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 80, 319324.Google Scholar
Van Regenmortel, M.H. (Ed.) (2006) Immunoinformatics may lead to a reappraisal of the nature of B cell epitopes and of the feasibility of synthetic peptide vaccines. Journal of Molecular Recognition 19, 183187.Google Scholar
Vriend, G. & Sander, C. (1993) Quality control of protein models: Directional atomic contact analysis. Journal of Applied Crystallography 26, 4760.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2006) Weekly Epidemiological Record, No. 22. Geneva, WHO.Google Scholar
Wu, Y., Egerton, G., Pappins, D.J.C., Harrison, R.A., Wilkinson, M., Underwood, A. & Bianco, A.E. (2004) The secreted larval acidic proteins (SLAPs) of Onchcerca spp. are encoded by orthologues of the alt gene family of Brugia malayi and have host protective potential. Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology 134, 213224.Google Scholar
Yang, W., Jackson, D.C., Zeng, Q. & McManus, D.P. (2000) Multi-epitope schistosome vaccine candidates tested for protective immunogenicity in mice. Vaccine 19, 103113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Supplementary material: Image

Madhumathi supplementary material

Figure S1

Download Madhumathi supplementary material(Image)
Image 1.9 MB
Supplementary material: Image

Madhumathi supplementary material

Figure S2

Download Madhumathi supplementary material(Image)
Image 1.5 MB
Supplementary material: Image

Madhumathi supplementary material

Figure S3

Download Madhumathi supplementary material(Image)
Image 304.8 KB
Supplementary material: Image

Madhumathi supplementary material

Figure S4

Download Madhumathi supplementary material(Image)
Image 2.4 MB