Department of Laboratory Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Department of Pediatrics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Transfusion. 2019 May;59(5):1651-1656. doi: 10.1111/trf.15212. Epub 2019 Feb 27.
It is well known that specific groups of patients immunologically respond more readily than others to red blood cell (RBC) antigens. While allogeneic RBC antigen exposure is the primary determinant of alloantibody formation, other variables are also involved. Given the significant primary sequence identity between common RBC and microbial antigens, we hypothesized that certain individuals may be immunologically primed to form RBC alloantibodies via environmental exposure to cross-reactive microbial epitopes, and that such a correlation may be linked to blood group antigen immunogenicity.
We examined the relationship between RBC-microbe peptide homology and the formation of alloantibodies to the most immunogenic RBC antigens, using the BLASTp homology database. Thirteen-residue peptides centered on the polymorphic amino acids of K, Jk , Lu , E, c, M, C, and S antigens were queried for identity with microbial peptides using the BLASTp database. Results were restricted to bacteria and fungi, with a selective threshold of >80% identity for inclusion, to allow for minor peptide variability.
Significant peptide identity was found between RBC antigens and pathogenic organisms including B. fragilis, P. aeruginosa, and Candida spp., among others. Linear regression and k-medoids clustering analysis of the microbial genera meeting the inclusion criteria showed a statistically significant inverse correlation with RBC immunogenicity (b = -0.0017, r = 0.624 & p = 0.0197), with lower immunogenicity antigens associated with larger number of genera.
Our findings raise a potential relationship between microbial exposure and alloantibody formation, and lead to interesting questions regarding the potential relationship between RBC antigen immunogenicity and microbial prevalence.
众所周知,某些特定的患者群体对红细胞(RBC)抗原的免疫反应比其他群体更为容易。虽然同种异体 RBC 抗原暴露是形成同种异体抗体的主要决定因素,但其他变量也参与其中。鉴于常见 RBC 和微生物抗原之间存在显著的主要序列同一性,我们假设某些个体可能通过环境暴露于交叉反应性微生物表位而在免疫上被预先致敏以形成 RBC 同种异体抗体,并且这种相关性可能与血型抗原免疫原性有关。
我们使用 BLASTp 同源性数据库,检查了 RBC-微生物肽同源性与形成针对最具免疫原性 RBC 抗原的同种异体抗体之间的关系。以 K、Jk、Lu、E、c、M、C 和 S 抗原的多态性氨基酸为中心,查询了 13 个残基的肽与微生物肽的同一性,使用 BLASTp 数据库。结果仅限于细菌和真菌,并设定了 80%以上的同一性选择阈值,以允许存在少量肽变异性。
在 RBC 抗原和包括脆弱拟杆菌、铜绿假单胞菌和假丝酵母在内的致病性生物体之间发现了显著的肽同一性。对符合纳入标准的微生物属进行线性回归和 k-均值聚类分析显示,与 RBC 免疫原性呈显著负相关(b=-0.0017,r=0.624,p=0.0197),免疫原性较低的抗原与更多的属相关。
我们的发现提出了微生物暴露与同种异体抗体形成之间存在潜在关系,并提出了关于 RBC 抗原免疫原性与微生物流行之间潜在关系的有趣问题。