Litcius/Paper detail

The Trypanosoma cruzi Antigen and Epitope Atlas: antibody specificities in Chagas disease patients across the Americas

Alejandro D. Ricci, Leonel Bracco, Emir Salas‐Sarduy, Janine M. Ramsey, Melissa S. Nolan, Mary K. Lynn, Jaime Altcheh, Griselda Ballering, Faustino Torrico, Norival Kesper, Juan Carlos Villar, Iván Marcipar, Jorge D. Marco, Fernán Agüero

2023Nature Communications33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During an infection the immune system produces pathogen-specific antibodies. These antibody repertoires become specific to the history of infections and represent a rich source of diagnostic markers. However, the specificities of these antibodies are mostly unknown. Here, using high-density peptide arrays we examined the human antibody repertoires of Chagas disease patients. Chagas disease is a neglected disease caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a protozoan parasite that evades immune mediated elimination and mounts long-lasting chronic infections. We describe a proteome-wide search for antigens, characterised their linear epitopes, and show their reactivity on 71 individuals from diverse human populations. Using single-residue mutagenesis we revealed the core functional residues for 232 of these epitopes. Finally, we show the diagnostic performance of identified antigens on challenging samples. These datasets enable the study of the Chagas antibody repertoire at an unprecedented depth and granularity, while also providing a rich source of serological biomarkers.

Topics & Concepts

Trypanosoma cruziChagas diseaseEpitopeBiologyAntigenAntibodyVirologySerologyEpitope mappingImmune systemImmunologyParasite hostingWorld Wide WebComputer scienceTrypanosoma species research and implicationsSynthesis and Biological EvaluationResearch on Leishmaniasis Studies