Discovery of Human-Specific Immunodominant Chlamydia trachomatis B Cell Epitopes

Author:

Rahman K. Shamsur1,Darville Toni2,Russell Ali N.2,O’Connell Catherine M.2,Wiesenfeld Harold C.3,Hillier Sharon L.3,Chowdhury Erfan U.1,Juan Yen-Chen1,Kaltenboeck Bernhard1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA

2. Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA

3. Department of Obstetrics, Gynaecology and Reproductive Sciences, the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and the Magee-Womens Research Institute Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

Current serological assays for species-specific detection of anti- Chlamydia species antibodies suffer from well-known shortcomings in specificity and ease of use. Due to the high prevalences of both anti- C. trachomatis and anti- C. pneumoniae antibodies in human populations, species-specific serology is unreliable. Therefore, novel specific and simple assays for chlamydial serology are urgently needed. Conventional antigens are problematic due to extensive cross-reactivity within Chlamydia spp. Using accurate B cell epitope prediction and a robust peptide ELISA methodology developed in our laboratory, we identified immunodominant C. trachomatis B cell epitopes by screening performed with sera from C. trachomatis -infected women. We discovered 38 novel human host-dependent antigens from 20 immunodominant C. trachomatis proteins, in addition to confirming 10 host-independent mouse serum peptide antigens that had been identified previously. This extended set of highly specific C. trachomatis peptide antigens can be used in simple ELISA or multiplexed microarray formats and will provide high specificity and sensitivity to human C. trachomatis serodiagnosis.

Funder

Molecular Diagnostics Laboatory Auburn University

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

Reference69 articles.

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