4.8 Article

In silico Design of an Epitope-Based Vaccine Ensemble for Chagas Disease

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02698

Keywords

Chagas disease; Trypanosoma cruzi; epitope-based; vaccine; CD4 T cell; CD8 T cell; B cell epitopes

Categories

Funding

  1. Juan de la Cierva-Incorporacion contract from the Spanish Science Ministry
  2. Departament d'Universitats i Recerca de la Generalitat de Catalunya, Spain (AGAUR) [2017SGR00924]
  3. Instituto de Salud Carlos III RICET Network for Cooperative Research in Tropical Diseases [ISCIII -RD12/0018/0010, PI1290]
  4. FEDER
  5. [BIO2014:54164R]

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Trypanosoma cruzi infection causes Chagas disease, which affects 7 million people worldwide. Two drugs are available to treat it: benznidazole and nifurtimox. Although both are efficacious against the acute stage of the disease, this is usually asymptomatic and goes undiagnosed and untreated. Diagnosis is achieved at the chronic stage, when life-threatening heart and/or gut tissue disruptions occur in similar to 30% of those chronically infected. By then, the drugs' efficacy is reduced, but not their associated high toxicity. Given current deficiencies in diagnosis and treatment, a vaccine to prevent infection and/or the development of symptoms would be a breakthrough in the management of the disease. Current vaccine candidates are mostly based on the delivery of single antigens or a few different antigens. Nevertheless, due to the high biological complexity of the parasite, targeting as many antigens as possible would be desirable. In this regard, an epitope-based vaccine design could be a well-suited approach. With this aim, we have gone through publicly available databases to identify T. cruzi epitopes from several antigens. By means of a computer-aided strategy, we have prioritized a set of epitopes based on sequence conservation criteria, projected population coverage of Latin American population, and biological features of their antigens of origin. Fruit of this analysis, we provide a selection of CD8(+) T cell, CD4(+) T cell, and B cell epitopes that have T. cruzi.

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