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Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition

BACKGROUND: A family of hydrophilic acylated surface (HASP) proteins, containing extensive and variant amino acid repeats, is expressed at the plasma membrane in infective extracellular (metacyclic) and intracellular (amastigote) stages of Old World Leishmania species. While HASPs are antigenic in t...

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Autores principales: Depledge, Daniel P., MacLean, Lorna M., Hodgkinson, Michael R., Smith, Barbara A., Jackson, Andrew P., Ma, Saufung, Uliana, Silvia R. B., Smith, Deborah F.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2946902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20927190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000829
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author Depledge, Daniel P.
MacLean, Lorna M.
Hodgkinson, Michael R.
Smith, Barbara A.
Jackson, Andrew P.
Ma, Saufung
Uliana, Silvia R. B.
Smith, Deborah F.
author_facet Depledge, Daniel P.
MacLean, Lorna M.
Hodgkinson, Michael R.
Smith, Barbara A.
Jackson, Andrew P.
Ma, Saufung
Uliana, Silvia R. B.
Smith, Deborah F.
author_sort Depledge, Daniel P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A family of hydrophilic acylated surface (HASP) proteins, containing extensive and variant amino acid repeats, is expressed at the plasma membrane in infective extracellular (metacyclic) and intracellular (amastigote) stages of Old World Leishmania species. While HASPs are antigenic in the host and can induce protective immune responses, the biological functions of these Leishmania-specific proteins remain unresolved. Previous genome analysis has suggested that parasites of the sub-genus Leishmania (Viannia) have lost HASP genes from their genomes. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have used molecular and cellular methods to analyse HASP expression in New World Leishmania mexicana complex species and show that, unlike in L. major, these proteins are expressed predominantly following differentiation into amastigotes within macrophages. Further genome analysis has revealed that the L. (Viannia) species, L. (V.) braziliensis, does express HASP-like proteins of low amino acid similarity but with similar biochemical characteristics, from genes present on a region of chromosome 23 that is syntenic with the HASP/SHERP locus in Old World Leishmania species and the L. (L.) mexicana complex. A related gene is also present in Leptomonas seymouri and this may represent the ancestral copy of these Leishmania-genus specific sequences. The L. braziliensis HASP-like proteins (named the orthologous (o) HASPs) are predominantly expressed on the plasma membrane in amastigotes and are recognised by immune sera taken from 4 out of 6 leishmaniasis patients tested in an endemic region of Brazil. Analysis of the repetitive domains of the oHASPs has shown considerable genetic variation in parasite isolates taken from the same patients, suggesting that antigenic change may play a role in immune recognition of this protein family. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings confirm that antigenic hydrophilic acylated proteins are expressed from genes in the same chromosomal region in species across the genus Leishmania. These proteins are surface-exposed on amastigotes (although L. (L.) major parasites also express HASPB on the metacyclic plasma membrane). The central repetitive domains of the HASPs are highly variant in their amino acid sequences, both within and between species, consistent with a role in immune recognition in the host.
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spelling pubmed-29469022010-10-06 Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition Depledge, Daniel P. MacLean, Lorna M. Hodgkinson, Michael R. Smith, Barbara A. Jackson, Andrew P. Ma, Saufung Uliana, Silvia R. B. Smith, Deborah F. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: A family of hydrophilic acylated surface (HASP) proteins, containing extensive and variant amino acid repeats, is expressed at the plasma membrane in infective extracellular (metacyclic) and intracellular (amastigote) stages of Old World Leishmania species. While HASPs are antigenic in the host and can induce protective immune responses, the biological functions of these Leishmania-specific proteins remain unresolved. Previous genome analysis has suggested that parasites of the sub-genus Leishmania (Viannia) have lost HASP genes from their genomes. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have used molecular and cellular methods to analyse HASP expression in New World Leishmania mexicana complex species and show that, unlike in L. major, these proteins are expressed predominantly following differentiation into amastigotes within macrophages. Further genome analysis has revealed that the L. (Viannia) species, L. (V.) braziliensis, does express HASP-like proteins of low amino acid similarity but with similar biochemical characteristics, from genes present on a region of chromosome 23 that is syntenic with the HASP/SHERP locus in Old World Leishmania species and the L. (L.) mexicana complex. A related gene is also present in Leptomonas seymouri and this may represent the ancestral copy of these Leishmania-genus specific sequences. The L. braziliensis HASP-like proteins (named the orthologous (o) HASPs) are predominantly expressed on the plasma membrane in amastigotes and are recognised by immune sera taken from 4 out of 6 leishmaniasis patients tested in an endemic region of Brazil. Analysis of the repetitive domains of the oHASPs has shown considerable genetic variation in parasite isolates taken from the same patients, suggesting that antigenic change may play a role in immune recognition of this protein family. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These findings confirm that antigenic hydrophilic acylated proteins are expressed from genes in the same chromosomal region in species across the genus Leishmania. These proteins are surface-exposed on amastigotes (although L. (L.) major parasites also express HASPB on the metacyclic plasma membrane). The central repetitive domains of the HASPs are highly variant in their amino acid sequences, both within and between species, consistent with a role in immune recognition in the host. Public Library of Science 2010-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2946902/ /pubmed/20927190 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000829 Text en Depledge et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Depledge, Daniel P.
MacLean, Lorna M.
Hodgkinson, Michael R.
Smith, Barbara A.
Jackson, Andrew P.
Ma, Saufung
Uliana, Silvia R. B.
Smith, Deborah F.
Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title_full Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title_fullStr Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title_full_unstemmed Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title_short Leishmania-Specific Surface Antigens Show Sub-Genus Sequence Variation and Immune Recognition
title_sort leishmania-specific surface antigens show sub-genus sequence variation and immune recognition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2946902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20927190
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0000829
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