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A Novel B-Cell Epitope Identified within Mycobacterium tuberculosis CFP10/ESAT-6 Protein
Author(s) -
Hua Yang,
Haizhen Chen,
Zhonghua Liu,
Hui Ma,
Lianhua Qin,
Ruiliang Jin,
Ruijuan Zheng,
Yonghong Feng,
Zhenling Cui,
Jie Wang,
Jinming Liu,
Zhongyi Hu
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0052848
Subject(s) - epitope , esat 6 , polyclonal antibodies , mycobacterium tuberculosis , linear epitope , virology , biopanning , antibody , phage display , antigen , biology , epitope mapping , immunodominance , microbiology and biotechnology , tuberculosis , peptide library , peptide sequence , immunology , medicine , gene , genetics , pathology
Background The 10-kDa culture filtrate protein (CFP10) and 6-kDa early-secreted target antigen (ESAT-6) play important roles in mycobacterial virulence and pathogenesis through a 1∶1 complex formation (CFP10/ESAT-6 protein, CE protein), which have been used in discriminating TB patients from BCG-vaccinated individuals. The B-cell epitopes of CFP10 and ESAT-6 separately have been analyzed before, however, the epitopes of the CE protein are unclear and the precise epitope in the positions 40 to 62 of ESAT-6 is still unknown. Methods In the present study, we searched for the B-cell epitopes of CE protein by using phage-display library biopanning with the anti-CE polyclonal antibodies. The epitopes were identified by sequence alignment, binding affinity and specificity detection, generation of polyclonal mouse sera and detection of TB patient sera. Results One linear B-cell epitope (KWDAT) consistent with the 162 nd –166 th sequence of CE and the 57 th –61 st sequence of ESAT-6 protein was selected and identified. Significantly higher titers of E5 peptide-binding antibodies were found in the sera of TB patients compared with those of healthy individuals. Conclusion There was a B-cell epitope for CE and ESAT-6 protein in the position 40 to 62 of ESAT-6. E5 peptide may be useful in the serodiagnosis of tuberculosis, which need to be further confirmed by more sera samples.

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