Identification of multiple HLA-A*0201-restricted cruzipain and FL-160 CD8+ epitopes recognized by T cells from chronically Trypanosoma cruzi-infected patients |
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Authors: | Fonseca Simone G Moins-Teisserenc Hélène Clave Emmanuel Ianni Bárbara Nunes Vera Lopes Mady Charles Iwai Leo K Sette Alessandro Sidney John Marin Maria Lúcia C Goldberg Anna Carla Guilherme Luiza Charron Dominique Toubert Antoine Kalil Jorge Cunha-Neto Edecio |
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Affiliation: | Laboratório de Imunologia, Heart Institute, Instituto do Cora??o (InCor), Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de S?o Paulo, Av Dr Enéas de Carvalho Aguiar, 44 BL 2, 9 andar, S?o Paulo-SP 05403-000, Brazil. |
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Abstract: | Chronic Chagas disease occurs in 16 million individuals chronically infected by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi in Latin America, and may lead to a dilated cardiomyopathy in 10-30% of patients. A vigorous cellular immune response holds parasitism in check. However, up to now, few T. cruzi proteins have been shown to be recognized by CD8+ T cells from Chagas disease patients. In this study, we designed 94 peptides derived from T. cruzi proteins cruzipain and FL-160, predicted to bind to HLA-A2 molcules. After in vitro binding assays to HLA-A*0201, 26 peptides were selected, and their recognition by PBMC from Chagas disease patients was tested with the IFN-gamma ELISPOT assay. All 26 peptides were recognized by PBMC from at least one patient. Furthermore, a tetrameric HLA-A*0201 complex built with the cruzipain 60-68 peptide that was frequently recognized in the periphery also bound to CD8+ T cells from a heart-infiltrating T cell line obtained from a single patient with Chagas disease cardiomyopathy. Thus, our results suggest that the recognition of CD8+ T cell epitopes in cruzipain and FL-160 may have a pathogenic or protective role in chronic Chagas disease. |
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