Versteeg Leroy, Adhikari Rakesh, Robinson Gonteria, Lee Jungsoon, Wei Junfei, Islam Nelufa, Keegan Brian, Russell William K, Poveda Cristina, Villar Maria Jose, Jones Kathryn, Bottazzi Maria Elena, Hotez Peter, Tijhaar Edwin, Pollet Jeroen
Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Tropical Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
Cell Biology and Immunology Group, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands.
PLoS Pathog. 2024 Dec 18;20(12):e1012764. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1012764. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Trypanosoma cruzi is a protozoan parasite that causes Chagas disease. Globally 6 to 7 million people are infected by this parasite of which 20-30% will progress to develop Chronic Chagasic Cardiomyopathy (CCC). Despite its high disease burden, no clinically approved vaccine exists for the prevention or treatment of CCC. Developing vaccines that can stimulate T. cruzi-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T cells and eliminate infected cells requires targeting parasitic antigens presented on major histocompatibility complex-I (MHC-I) molecules. We utilized mass spectrometry-based immunopeptidomics to investigate which parasitic peptides are displayed on MHC-I of T. cruzi infected cells. Through duplicate experiments, we identified an array of unique peptides that could be traced back to 17 distinct T. cruzi proteins. Notably, six peptides were derived from Tcj2, a trypanosome chaperone protein and member of the DnaJ (heat shock protein 40) family, showcasing its potential as a viable candidate vaccine antigen with cytotoxic T cell inducing capacity. Upon testing Tcj2 as an mRNA vaccine candidate in mice, we observed a strong memory cytotoxic CD8+ T cell response along with a Th1-skewed humoral antibody response. In vitro co-cultures of T. cruzi infected cells with splenocytes of Tcj2-immunized mice restricted the replication of T. cruzi, demonstrating the protective potential of Tcj2 as a vaccine target. Moreover, antisera from Tcj2-vaccinated mice displayed no cross-reactivity with DnaJ in lysates from mouse and human indicating a decreased likelihood of triggering autoimmune reactions. Our findings highlight how immunopeptidomics can identify new vaccine targets for Chagas disease, with Tcj2 emerging as a promising new mRNA vaccine candidate.
克氏锥虫是一种导致恰加斯病的原生动物寄生虫。全球有600万至700万人感染这种寄生虫,其中20%-30%的人会发展为慢性恰加斯病性心肌病(CCC)。尽管其疾病负担很高,但目前尚无临床批准的用于预防或治疗CCC的疫苗。开发能够刺激克氏锥虫特异性CD8+细胞毒性T细胞并清除受感染细胞的疫苗需要靶向主要组织相容性复合体-I(MHC-I)分子上呈现的寄生虫抗原。我们利用基于质谱的免疫肽组学来研究哪些寄生虫肽在克氏锥虫感染细胞的MHC-I上展示。通过重复实验,我们鉴定出一系列独特的肽,这些肽可追溯到17种不同的克氏锥虫蛋白。值得注意的是,六种肽来自Tcj2,一种锥虫伴侣蛋白和DnaJ(热休克蛋白40)家族成员,显示出其作为具有细胞毒性T细胞诱导能力的可行候选疫苗抗原的潜力。在将Tcj2作为mRNA疫苗候选物在小鼠中进行测试时,我们观察到强烈的记忆性细胞毒性CD8+T细胞反应以及Th1偏向的体液抗体反应。克氏锥虫感染细胞与Tcj2免疫小鼠的脾细胞进行体外共培养限制了克氏锥虫的复制,证明了Tcj2作为疫苗靶点的保护潜力。此外,来自接种Tcj2疫苗小鼠的抗血清在小鼠和人类裂解物中与DnaJ没有交叉反应,表明引发自身免疫反应的可能性降低。我们的研究结果突出了免疫肽组学如何能够识别恰加斯病的新疫苗靶点,Tcj2成为一种有前途的新型mRNA疫苗候选物。