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Structure–function relationships of the antigenicity of mycolic acids in tuberculosis patients

Authors :
Gani Koza
Mark S. Baird
Cornelia Theunissen
Yolandy Lemmer
Lynne A. Pilcher
Anton Stoltz
Jan A. Verschoor
Richard Rowles
Madrey Deysel
Johan Grooten
Nsovo S. Mathebula
Mohammed Balogun
Juma'a R. Al Dulayymi
Maximiliano M. Iglesias
Sandra Van Wyngaardt
Mervyn Beukes
Vanessa V. Roberts
Gianna Toschi
Source :
Chemistry and Physics of Lipids
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Cell wall mycolic acids (MA) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) are CD1b presented antigens that can be used to detect antibodies as surrogate markers of active TB, even in HIV coinfected patients. The use of the complex mixtures of natural MA is complicated by an apparent antibody cross-reactivity with cholesterol. Here firstly we report three recombinant monoclonal scFv antibody fragments in the chicken germ-line antibody repertoire, which demonstrate the possibilities for cross-reactivity: the first recognized both cholesterol and mycolic acids, the second mycolic acids but not cholesterol, and the third cholesterol but not mycolic acids. Secondly, MA structure is experimentally interrogated to try to understand the cross-reactivity. Unique synthetic mycolic acids representative of the three main functional classes show varying antigenicity against human TB patient sera, depending on the functional groups present and on their stereochemistry. Oxygenated (methoxy- and keto-) mycolic acid was found to be more antigenic than alpha-mycolic acids. Synthetic methoxy-mycolic acids were the most antigenic, one containing a trans-cyclopropane apparently being somewhat more antigenic than the natural mixture. Trans-cyclopropane-containing keto- and hydroxy-mycolic acids were also found to be the most antigenic among each of these classes. However, none of the individual synthetic mycolic acids significantly and reproducibly distinguished the pooled serum of TB positive patients from that of TB negative patients better than the natural mixture of MA. This argues against the potential to improve the specificity of serodiagnosis of TB with a defined single synthetic mycolic acid antigen from this set, although sensitivity may be facilitated by using a synthetic methoxy-mycolic acid.

Details

ISSN :
00093084
Volume :
163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemistry and Physics of Lipids
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42d756329b88d100d5d327ad64669064