4.8 Article

Maximum antigen diversification in a lyme bacterial population and evolutionary strategies to overcome pathogen diversity

期刊

ISME JOURNAL
卷 16, 期 2, 页码 447-464

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41396-021-01089-4

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资金

  1. Public Health Service from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) of the United States of America [AI139782, AI072810, AI074092, AI155211]
  2. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) [CK000107]
  3. PhRMA Foundation [7F2400001]
  4. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [EB030275]
  5. Doctoral Program in Biology of the City University of New York

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Natural populations of pathogens and their hosts are engaged in an arms race, posing challenges to vaccine and diagnostic development. Using evolutionary and centroid algorithms, synthetic antigens with promising reactivity against diverse pathogen strains have been generated. The Maximum Antigen Diversification (MAD) model offers a novel approach to combating pathogen diversity.
Natural populations of pathogens and their hosts are engaged in an arms race in which the pathogens diversify to escape host immunity while the hosts evolve novel immunity. This co-evolutionary process poses a fundamental challenge to the development of broadly effective vaccines and diagnostics against a diversifying pathogen. Based on surveys of natural allele frequencies and experimental immunization of mice, we show high antigenic specificities of natural variants of the outer surface protein C (OspC), a dominant antigen of a Lyme Disease-causing bacterium (Borrelia burgdorferi). To overcome the challenge of OspC antigenic diversity to clinical development of preventive measures, we implemented a number of evolution-informed strategies to broaden OspC antigenic reactivity. In particular, the centroid algorithm-a genetic algorithm to generate sequences that minimize amino-acid differences with natural variants-generated synthetic OspC analogs with the greatest promise as diagnostic and vaccine candidates against diverse Lyme pathogen strains co-existing in the Northeast United States. Mechanistically, we propose a model of maximum antigen diversification (MAD) mediated by amino-acid variations distributed across the hypervariable regions on the OspC molecule. Under the MAD hypothesis, evolutionary centroids display broad cross-reactivity by occupying the central void in the antigenic space excavated by diversifying natural variants. In contrast to vaccine designs based on concatenated epitopes, the evolutionary algorithms generate analogs of natural antigens and are automated. The novel centroid algorithm and the evolutionary antigen designs based on consensus and ancestral sequences have broad implications for combating diversifying pathogens driven by pathogen-host co-evolution.

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