Serological tests are preferentially used for the diagnosis of Chagas' disease (CD) during the chronic phase because of the low parasitemia and high anti-Trypanosoma cruzi antibody titers. However, the current methods showed several disadvantages, as contradictory or inconclusive results, mainly related to the characteristics of the antigens used, in general, crude or whole parasites, but also due to antigen production protocol and the experimental conditions used in serological tests. Thus, better-quality serological assays are urgently needed. Here, we performed a wide immunogenomic screen strategy to identify conserved linear B-cell epitopes in the predicted proteome based on genome sequence from T. cruzi strains to will be applied as synthetic peptides in the serodiagnosis of the chronic CD. Three B-cell epitopes derived from mucin-associated surface protein (MASP) family, expressed in both infective parasite stages, trypomastigote and amastigotes, conserved in T. cruzi strains, and highly divergent as compared with Leishmania spp. proteome, were selected for this study. The results demonstrated that synthetic peptide 2 and a mixture of peptides (Mix II: peptides 2 and 3) were able to identify all chronic CD cases, indeterminate or Chagas cardiomyopathy clinical presentation, and simultaneously able to discriminate infections caused by Leishmania parasites, with high accuracy (98.37 and 100.00%, respectively) and agreement (kappa index = 0.967 and 1.000, respectively) with direct methods as compared to current diagnostic pipeline performed by reference laboratories in Brazil. This study represents an interesting strategy for the discovery of new antigens applied to serologic diagnosis of infectious diseases and for the technological development of platforms for large-scale production of diagnostic tests.
Recognising the importance of Chagas disease in Brazil, Bambuí set up epidemiological
surveillance for Chagas disease in 1974 and was the first municipality to do so. To
ascertain the current epidemiology of Chagas disease in this municipality, 1.782
blood samples from the general population were analysed; 7.7% of samples were found
to be seropositive for Chagas disease. A strong positive correlation between
increasing age and Chagas disease was evident in both genders, with the highest
prevalence in individuals aged over 60 years. Clinically, the cardiodigestive form of
Chagas disease was the most common in these samples. These data confirm the
interruption of Trypanosoma cruzi transmission, in parallel with a
still important residual morbidity of Chagas disease in the county, thus supporting
political decisions that will prioritise epidemiological surveillance and medical
treatment of Chagas disease in the coming years.
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