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Regions of High Antigenicity within the Hypothetical PPE Major Polymorphic Tandem Repeat Open‐Reading Frame, Rv2608, Show a Differential Humoral Response and a Low T Cell Response in Various Categories of Patients with Tuberculosis
Author(s) -
Prachee Chakhaiyar,
Y. Nagalakshmi,
Bandi Aruna,
K. J. R. Murthy,
Vishwa Mohan Katoch,
Seyed E. Hasnain
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/423938
Subject(s) - antigenicity , biology , humoral immunity , mycobacterium tuberculosis , tuberculosis , antigen , immune system , immunology , open reading frame , tandem repeat , antibody , virology , gene , genetics , medicine , peptide sequence , genome , pathology
The function of the PE/PPE families of proteins, which represent approximately 10% of the coding capacity of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome, has remained relatively unknown. We earlier described a PPE family member, Rv2430c, as an immunodominant antigen. We now report another PPE family gene, Rv2608, a member of the major polymorphic tandem repeat subfamily, for its ability to elicit a high humoral and a low T cell response. Rv2608 was also found to be polymorphic in different clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis, as determined by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment-length polymorphism analysis. A total of 51 clinically confirmed patients with tuberculosis (TB), belonging to 3 different categories--fresh infection (n=22), relapsed infection (n=21), and extrapulmonary infection (n=8)--and 10 healthy control subjects were included in the study. Recombinant Rv2608 protein showed positive reactivity to patients' serum samples. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and T cell-proliferation assays with synthetic peptides corresponding to predicted regions of high antigenicity showed a predominantly humoral response in patients with relapsed TB. We additionally identified the Gly-X-Gly-Asn-X-Gly repeat motifs as being primarily responsible for eliciting a humoral immune response.

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