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Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites

The abundant larval transcript (ALT-2) protein is present in all members of the Filarioidea, and has been reported as a potential candidate antigen for a subunit vaccine against lymphatic filariasis. To assess the potential for vaccine escape or heterologous protection, we examined the evolutionary...

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Autores principales: Devoe, Neil C., Corbett, Ian J., Barker, Linsey, Chang, Robert, Gudis, Polyxeni, Mullen, Nathan, Perez, Kailey, Raposo, Hugo, Scholz, John, May, Meghan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4758719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26890364
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148611
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author Devoe, Neil C.
Corbett, Ian J.
Barker, Linsey
Chang, Robert
Gudis, Polyxeni
Mullen, Nathan
Perez, Kailey
Raposo, Hugo
Scholz, John
May, Meghan
author_facet Devoe, Neil C.
Corbett, Ian J.
Barker, Linsey
Chang, Robert
Gudis, Polyxeni
Mullen, Nathan
Perez, Kailey
Raposo, Hugo
Scholz, John
May, Meghan
author_sort Devoe, Neil C.
collection PubMed
description The abundant larval transcript (ALT-2) protein is present in all members of the Filarioidea, and has been reported as a potential candidate antigen for a subunit vaccine against lymphatic filariasis. To assess the potential for vaccine escape or heterologous protection, we examined the evolutionary selection acting on ALT-2. The ratios of nonsynonymous (K(a)) to synonymous (K(s)) mutation frequencies (ω) were calculated for the alt-2 genes of the lymphatic filariasis agents Brugia malayi and Wuchereria bancrofti and the agents of river blindness and African eyeworm disease Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa. Two distinct Bayesian models of sequence evolution showed that ALT-2 of W. bancrofti and L. loa were under significant (P<0.05; P < 0.001) diversifying selection, while ALT-2 of B. malayi and O. volvulus were under neutral to stabilizing selection. Diversifying selection as measured by ω values was notably strongest on the region of ALT-2 encoding the signal peptide of L. loa and was elevated in the variable acidic domain of L. loa and W. bancrofti. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the ALT-2 consensus sequences formed three clades: the first consisting of B. malayi, the second consisting of W. bancrofti, and the third containing both O. volvulus and L. loa. ALT-2 selection was therefore not predictable by phylogeny or pathology, as the two species parasitizing the eye were selected differently, as were the two species parasitizing the lymphatic system. The most immunogenic regions of L. loa and W. bancrofti ALT-2 sequence as modeled by antigenicity prediction analysis did not correspond with elevated levels of diversifying selection, and were not selected differently than predicted antigenic epitopes in B. malayi and O. volvulus. Measurements of ALT-2 evolvability made by χ(2) analysis between alleles that were stable (O. volvulus and B. malayi) and those that were under diversifying selection (W. bancrofti and L. loa) indicated significant (P<0.01) deviations from a normal distribution for both W. bancrofti and L. loa. The relationship between evolvability and selection in L. loa followed a second order polynomial distribution (R(2) = 0.89), indicating that the two factors relate to one another in accordance with an additional unknown factor. Taken together, these findings indicate discrete evolutionary drivers acting on ALT-2 of the four organisms examined, and the described variation has implications for design of novel vaccines and diagnostic reagents. Additionally, this represents the first mathematical description of evolvability in a naturally occurring setting.
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spelling pubmed-47587192016-02-26 Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites Devoe, Neil C. Corbett, Ian J. Barker, Linsey Chang, Robert Gudis, Polyxeni Mullen, Nathan Perez, Kailey Raposo, Hugo Scholz, John May, Meghan PLoS One Research Article The abundant larval transcript (ALT-2) protein is present in all members of the Filarioidea, and has been reported as a potential candidate antigen for a subunit vaccine against lymphatic filariasis. To assess the potential for vaccine escape or heterologous protection, we examined the evolutionary selection acting on ALT-2. The ratios of nonsynonymous (K(a)) to synonymous (K(s)) mutation frequencies (ω) were calculated for the alt-2 genes of the lymphatic filariasis agents Brugia malayi and Wuchereria bancrofti and the agents of river blindness and African eyeworm disease Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa. Two distinct Bayesian models of sequence evolution showed that ALT-2 of W. bancrofti and L. loa were under significant (P<0.05; P < 0.001) diversifying selection, while ALT-2 of B. malayi and O. volvulus were under neutral to stabilizing selection. Diversifying selection as measured by ω values was notably strongest on the region of ALT-2 encoding the signal peptide of L. loa and was elevated in the variable acidic domain of L. loa and W. bancrofti. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the ALT-2 consensus sequences formed three clades: the first consisting of B. malayi, the second consisting of W. bancrofti, and the third containing both O. volvulus and L. loa. ALT-2 selection was therefore not predictable by phylogeny or pathology, as the two species parasitizing the eye were selected differently, as were the two species parasitizing the lymphatic system. The most immunogenic regions of L. loa and W. bancrofti ALT-2 sequence as modeled by antigenicity prediction analysis did not correspond with elevated levels of diversifying selection, and were not selected differently than predicted antigenic epitopes in B. malayi and O. volvulus. Measurements of ALT-2 evolvability made by χ(2) analysis between alleles that were stable (O. volvulus and B. malayi) and those that were under diversifying selection (W. bancrofti and L. loa) indicated significant (P<0.01) deviations from a normal distribution for both W. bancrofti and L. loa. The relationship between evolvability and selection in L. loa followed a second order polynomial distribution (R(2) = 0.89), indicating that the two factors relate to one another in accordance with an additional unknown factor. Taken together, these findings indicate discrete evolutionary drivers acting on ALT-2 of the four organisms examined, and the described variation has implications for design of novel vaccines and diagnostic reagents. Additionally, this represents the first mathematical description of evolvability in a naturally occurring setting. Public Library of Science 2016-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4758719/ /pubmed/26890364 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148611 Text en © 2016 Devoe 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Devoe, Neil C.
Corbett, Ian J.
Barker, Linsey
Chang, Robert
Gudis, Polyxeni
Mullen, Nathan
Perez, Kailey
Raposo, Hugo
Scholz, John
May, Meghan
Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title_full Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title_fullStr Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title_full_unstemmed Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title_short Differential Evolutionary Selection and Natural Evolvability Observed in ALT Proteins of Human Filarial Parasites
title_sort differential evolutionary selection and natural evolvability observed in alt proteins of human filarial parasites
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4758719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26890364
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148611
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