Defining Species-Specific Immunodominant B Cell Epitopes for Molecular Serology of Chlamydia Species

Author:

Rahman K. Shamsur,Chowdhury Erfan U.,Poudel Anil,Ruettger Anke,Sachse Konrad,Kaltenboeck Bernhard

Abstract

ABSTRACTUrgently needed species-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) for the detection of antibodies againstChlamydiaspp. have been elusive due to high cross-reactivity of chlamydial antigens. To identifyChlamydiaspecies-specific B cell epitopes for such assays, we ranked the potential epitopes of immunodominant chlamydial proteins that are polymorphic among allChlamydiaspecies. High-scoring peptides were synthesized with N-terminal biotin, followed by a serine-glycine-serine-glycine spacer, immobilized onto streptavidin-coated microtiter plates, and tested with mono-specific mouse hyperimmune sera against eachChlamydiaspecies in chemiluminescent ELISAs. For each of nineChlamydiaspecies, three to nine dominant polymorphic B cell epitope regions were identified on OmpA, CT618, PmpD, IncA, CT529, CT442, IncG, Omp2, TarP, and IncE proteins. Peptides corresponding to 16- to 40-amino-acid species-specific sequences of these epitopes reacted highly and with absolute specificity with homologous, but not heterologous,Chlamydiamonospecies-specific sera. Host-independent reactivity of such epitopes was confirmed by testing of sixC. pecorum-specific peptides from five proteins withC. pecorum-reactive sera from cattle, the natural host ofC. pecorum. The probability of cross-reactivity of peptide antigens from closely related chlamydial species or strains correlated with percent sequence identity and declined to zero at <50% sequence identity. Thus, phylograms of B cell epitope regions predict the specificity of peptide antigens for rational use in the genus-, species-, or serovar-specific molecular serology ofChlamydiaspp. We anticipate that these peptide antigens will improve chlamydial serology by providing easily accessible assays to nonspecialist laboratories. Our approach also lends itself to the identification of relevant epitopes of other microbial pathogens.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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