Ramaiah, Arunachalam and Nayak, Soumya and Rakshit, Srabanti and Manson, Abigail L and Abeel, Thomas and Shanmugam, Sivakumar and Sahoo, Pravat Nalini and John, Anto Jesuraj Uday Kumar and Sundaramurthi, Jagadish Chandrabose and Narayanan, Sujatha and D'Souza, George and von Hoegen, Paul and Ottenhoff, Tom HM and Swaminathan, Soumya and Earl, Ashlee M and Vyakarnam, Annapurna (2019) Evidence for Highly Variable, Region-Specific Patterns of T-Cell Epitope Mutations Accumulating in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Strains. In: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 10 .
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Abstract
Vaccines that confer protection through induction of adaptive T-cell immunity rely on understanding T-cell epitope (TCE) evolution induced by immune escape. This is poorly understood in tuberculosis (TB), an ancient, chronic disease, where CD4 T-cell immunity is of recognized importance. We probed 905 functionally validated, curated human CD4 T cell epitopes in 79 Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) whole genomes from India. This screen resulted in identifying 64 mutated epitopes in these strains initially using a computational pipeline and subsequently verified by single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. SNP based phylogeny revealed the 79 Mtb strains to cluster to East African Indian (EAI), Central Asian Strain (CAS), and Beijing (BEI) lineages. Eighty-nine percent of the mutated T-cell epitopes (mTCEs) identified in the 79 Mtb strains from India has not previously been reported. These mTCEs were encoded by genes with high nucleotide diversity scores including seven mTCEs encoded by six antigens in the top 10% of rapidly divergent Mtb genes encoded by these strains. Using a T cell functional assay readout, we demonstrate 62% of mTCEs tested to significantly alter CD4 T-cell IFN gamma and/or IL2 secretion with associated changes in predicted HLA-DR binding affinity: the gain of function mutations displayed higher predicted HLA-DR binding affinity and conversely mutations resulting in loss of function displayed lower predicted HLA-DR binding affinity. Most mutated antigens belonged to the cell wall/cell processes, and, intermediary metabolism and respiration families though all known Mtb proteins encoded mutations. Analysis of the mTCEs in an SNP database of 5,310 global Mtb strains identified 82% mTCEs to be significantly more prevalent in Mtb strains isolated from India, including 36 mTCEs identified exclusively in strains from India. These epitopes had a significantly higher predicted binding affinity to HLA-DR alleles that were highly prevalent in India compared to HLA-DR alleles rare in India, highlighting HLA-DR maybe an important driver of these mutations. This first evidence of region-specific TCE mutations potentially employed by Mtb to escape host immunity has important implications for TB vaccine design.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
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Publication: | FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY |
Publisher: | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA |
Additional Information: | Copyright for this article belongs to Frontiers Media S.A. |
Keywords: | Mycobacterium tuberculosis; genome sequence; T-cell epitopes; evolution; immune response; TB vaccine |
Department/Centre: | Division of Biological Sciences > Centre for Infectious Disease Research |
Date Deposited: | 04 Mar 2019 06:26 |
Last Modified: | 04 Mar 2019 06:26 |
URI: | http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/61878 |
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