1. Identification of B- and T-cell epitopes within the MTP40 protein of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and their correlation with the disease course.
- Author
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Falla JC, Parra CA, Mendoza M, Franco LC, Guzmán F, Forero J, Orozco O, and Patarroyo ME
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Antibodies, Bacterial immunology, Antibody Specificity, Antigens, Bacterial chemistry, Epitopes, Humans, Lymphocyte Activation, Molecular Sequence Data, Peptides chemistry, Tuberculosis immunology, Antigens, Bacterial immunology, B-Lymphocytes immunology, Bacterial Proteins, Mycobacterium tuberculosis immunology, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Type C Phospholipases
- Abstract
Synthetic peptides derived from the amino acid sequence of MTP40, a recently characterized Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein, were tested by two different immunological assays in 91 individuals. For the purposes of this study, the population was distributed in four groups: active tuberculosis (TBC) patients with elevated bacillus loads (BK+), active TBC patients with low bacillus loads (BK-), healthy individuals living in the same household with tuberculous patients (HH), and normal individuals, who had presumably never been in contact with the bacilli (control). We found that T cells of individuals belonging to the HH group showed the highest and most frequent recognition of these peptides in a T-cell proliferation assay, while their antibodies showed the lowest recognition of these peptides when tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In contrast, TBC patients revealed an inverse pattern of immune response. Interestingly, one of these peptides (P7) was recognized by T cells of 64% of the HH individuals and by 4.5% of normal donors. Another peptide (P4) was recognized by 55% of sera from BK+ patients and by 5.5% of normal donors. The results presented here indicate the existence of T- and B-cell epitopes within the MTP40 protein. Given the particular recognition pattern of this protein, added to the fact that it appears to be a species-specific antigen of M. tuberculosis, a detailed study of the immune response to it may be useful in the design of more accurate diagnostic tests and an improved vaccine against human TBC.
- Published
- 1991
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