East Coast fever, caused by the tick-borne intracellular apicomplexan parasite Theileria parva, is a highly fatal lymphoproliferative disease of cattle. The pathogenic schizont-induced lymphocyte transformation is a unique cancer-like condition that is reversible with parasite removal. Schizont-infected cell-directed CD8 ؉ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) constitute the dominant protective bovine immune response after a single exposure to infection. However, the schizont antigens targeted by T. parva-specific CTL are undefined. Here we show the identification of five candidate vaccine antigens that are the targets of MHC class I-restricted CD8 ؉ CTL from immune cattle. CD8 ؉ T cell responses to these antigens were boosted in T. parva-immune cattle resolving a challenge infection and, when used to immunize naïve cattle, induced CTL responses that significantly correlated with survival from a lethal parasite challenge. These data provide a basis for developing a CTL-targeted anti-East Coast fever subunit vaccine. In addition, orthologs of these antigens may be vaccine targets for other apicomplexan parasites.cattle ͉ East Coast fever ͉ immunoscreening ͉ protozoan parasite ͉ vaccination A single inoculation with a potentially lethal dose of Theileria parva sporozoites and simultaneous treatment with a longacting oxytetracycline induces solid immunity to homologous and, in certain instances, heterologous parasite challenge (1, 2). This methodology has been adopted as a live vaccine for the control of East Coast fever (ECF) (3). The long-lasting immunity to ECF contrasts with the partial immunity to malaria that develops after only several years of exposure to T. parva-related Plasmodium spp. (4). Manufacture and delivery of the live ECF vaccine is difficult to sustain, but it has enabled elucidation of the dominant protective immune response against the disease. Kinetic and adoptive cell transfer studies (5, 6) have demonstrated that protection of cattle is mediated by MHC class I-restricted CD8 ϩ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) that destroy schizontinfected lymphocytes, the pathogenic life-cycle stage of T. parva. In addition, there is a strong correlation between the specificity of the CTL response and cross-immunity profiles of distinct parasite strains (2). The identification of schizont antigens targeted by CTL from T. parva-immune cattle has been elusive but should pave the way for the development of a subunit vaccine against ECF and provide a long-term solution to a socioeconomically important constraint to livestock agriculture in Africa (7). We adopted two approaches to antigen identification, both dependent on screening of transiently transfected antigenpresenting cells with fully characterized CTL (8, 9) from live vaccine-immunized cattle of diverse bovine leukocyte antigen (BoLA) MHC class I genotypes. First, in a targeted gene approach, we immunoscreened genes that were predicted by using preliminary sequence data from one of the four T. parva chromosomes (10) to contain a secretion signal. The approach was ...
Schistosomiasis is a debilitating parasitic disease of humans, endemic in tropical areas, for which no vaccine is available. Evidence points to glycan antigens as being important in immune responses to infection. Here we describe our studies on the comparative humoral immune responses to defined schistosome-type glycan epitopes in Schistosoma mansoni-infected humans, rhesus monkeys and mice. Rhesus anti-glycan responses over the course of infection were screened on a defined glycan microarray comprising semi-synthetic glycopeptides terminating with schistosome-associated or control mammalian-type glycan epitopes, as well as a defined glycan microarray of mammalian-type glycans representing over 400 glycan structures. Infected rhesus monkeys generated a high immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody response to the core xylose/core α3 fucose epitope of N-glycans, which peaked at 8-11 weeks post infection, coinciding with maximal ability to kill schistosomula in vitro. By contrast, infected humans generated low antibody levels to this epitope. At 18 months following praziquantel therapy to eliminate the parasite, antibody levels were negligible. Mice chronically infected with S. mansoni generated high levels of anti-fucosylated LacdiNAc (GalNAcβ1, 4(Fucα1, 3)GlcNAc) IgM antibodies, but lacked a robust response to the core xylose/core α3 fucose N-glycan antigens compared with other species studied, and their sera demonstrated an intermediate level of schistosomula killing in vitro. These differential responses to parasite glycan antigens may be related to the ability of rhesus monkeys to self-cure in contrast to the chronic infection seen in humans and mice. Our results validate defined glycan microarrays as a useful technology to evaluate diagnostic and vaccine antigens for schistosomiasis and perhaps other infections.
We describe the development of a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based approach for analysis of genetic diversity at the DQA loci in African Bos indicus and Bos taurus cattle. This approach, equally effective in European and Asian cattle breeds, detects the presence or absence of DQA1 and most duplicated DQA2 genes. Nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequence analysis of the highly polymorphic second exons, in addition to analysis of the locus-specific and relatively non-polymorphic transmembrane, cytoplasmic, and 3-prime untranslated regions, has provided evidence for considerable diversity between each of the duplicated DQA2 genes. Therefore, we propose the designation BoLA-DQA3 for the previously unpublished alleles at the second DQA2 locus. Fourteen distinct PCR restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) patterns, each identifying families of alleles at three DQA loci, can be distinguished. Nucleotide sequence analysis of new PCR-RFLP patterns from 193 Kenyan Boran, Ethiopian Arsi (B. indicus), and Guinean N'Dama (B. taurus) cattle identified 13 DQA1 alleles within eight major allelic families, five DQA2 alleles within a single allelic family, and seven DQA3 alleles within three major allelic families.
Glycan microarray technology has become a successful tool for studying protein-carbohydrate interactions, but a limitation has been the laborious synthesis of glycan structures by enzymatic and chemical methods. Here we describe a new method to generate quantifiable glycan libraries from natural sources by combining widely used protease digestion of glycoproteins and Fmoc chemistry. Glycoproteins including chicken ovalbumin, bovine fetuin, and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were digested by pronase, protected by FmocCl, and efficiently separated by 2D-HPLC. We show that glycans from HRP glycopeptides separated by HPLC and fluorescence monitoring retained their natural reducing end structures, mostly core α1,3-fucose and core α1,2-xylose. After simple Fmoc-deprotection, the glycans were printed on NHS-activated glass slides. The glycans were interrogated using plant lectins and antibodies in sera from mice infected with Schistosoma mansoni, which revealed the presence of both IgM and IgG antibody responses to HRP-glycopeptides. This simple approach to glycopeptide purification and conjugation allows for the development of natural glycopeptide microarrays without the need to remove and derivatize glycans and potentially compromise their reducing end determinants.
Schistosomiasis caused by infection with parasitic helminths of Schistosoma spp. is a major global health problem due to inadequate treatment and lack of a vaccine. The immune response to schistosomes includes glycan antigens, which could be valuable diagnostic markers and vaccine targets. However, no precedent exists for how to design vaccines targeting eukaryotic glycoconjugates. The di- and tri-saccharide motifs LacdiNAc (GalNAcβ1,4GlcNAc; LDN) and fucosylated LacdiNAc (GalNAcβ1,4(Fucα1-3)GlcNAc; LDNF) are the basis for several important schistosome glycan antigens. They occur in monomeric form or as repeating units (poly-LDNF) and as part of a variety of different glycoconjugates. Because chemical synthesis and conjugation of such antigens is exceedingly difficult, we sought to develop a recombinant expression system for parasite glycans. We hypothesized that presentation of parasite glycans on the cell surface would induce glycan-specific antibodies. We generated Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) Lec8 cell lines expressing poly-LDN (L8-GT) and poly-LDNF (L8-GTFT) abundantly on their membrane glycoproteins. Sera from Schistosoma mansoni-infected mice were highly cross-reactive with the cells and with cell-surface N-glycans. Immunizing mice with L8-GT and L8-GTFT cells induced glycan-specific antibodies. The L8-GTFT cells induced a sustained booster response, with antibodies that bound to S. mansoni lysates and recapitulated the exquisite specificity of the anti-parasite response for particular presentations of LDNF antigen. In summary, this recombinant expression system promotes successful generation of antibodies to the glycans of S. mansoni, and it can be adapted to study the role of glycan antigens and anti-glycan immune responses in many other infections and pathologies.
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