| Literature DB >> 27840974 |
Haiwei Yang1, Hao Chen2, Min Jin2, Hua Xie3, Shaoheng He1, Ji-Fu Wei2.
Abstract
Per a 9 is a major allergen of the American cockroach (CR), which has been recognized as an important cause of imunoglobulin E-mediated type I hypersensitivity worldwide. However, it is not neasy to obtain a substantial quantity of this allergen for use in functional studies. In the present study, the Per a 9 gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli (E. coli) systems. It was found that 13/16 (81.3%) of the sera from patients with allergies caused by the American CR reacted to Per a 9, as assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, confirming that Per a 9 is a major allergen of CR. The induction of the expression of CD63 and CCR3 in passively sensitized basophils (from sera of patients with allergies caused by the American CR) by approximately 4.2-fold indicated that recombinant Per a 9 was functionally active. Three immunoinformatics tools, including the DNAStar Protean system, Bioinformatics Predicted Antigenic Peptides (BPAP) system and the BepiPred 1.0 server were used to predict the potential B cell epitopes, while Net-MHCIIpan-2.0 and NetMHCII-2.2 were used to predict the T cell epitopes of Per a 9. As a result, we predicted 11 peptides (23-28, 39-46, 58-64, 91-118, 131-136, 145-154, 159-165, 176-183, 290-299, 309-320 and 338-344) as potential B cell linear epitopes. In T cell prediction, the Per a 9 allergen was predicted to have 5 potential T cell epitope sequences, 119-127, 194-202, 210-218, 239-250 and 279-290. The findings of our study may prove to be useful in the development of peptide-based vaccines to combat CR-induced allergies.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27840974 PMCID: PMC5117749 DOI: 10.3892/ijmm.2016.2793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Med ISSN: 1107-3756 Impact factor: 4.101
Figure 1cDNA sequence encoding Per a 9 and the deduced amino acid sequence. The first 3 bases ATG represent the start code. The last 3 bases indicate the stop codon.
Figure 2Expression and purification of Per a 9 in E. coli. (A) Per a 9 expressed at 15, 25 or 37°C was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Lane M, Smart Broad-Range protein standard (Genscript, Nanjing, China); lane 1, the supernatant of un-induced cells; lane 2, the precipitant of un-induced cells; lane 3, the supernatant of the cells induced at 15°C; lane 4, the precipitant of the cells induced at 15°C; lane 5, the supernatant of the cells induced at 25°C; lane 6, the precipitant of the cells induced at 25°C; lane 7, the supernatant of the cells induced at 37°C; lane 8, the precipitant of the cells induced at 37°C. The arrow represents Per a 9 protein. (B) SDS-PAGE analysis of purified Per a 9 expressed in E. coli. Lane M, protein standard; lane 1, total protein after sonication; lane 2, the supernatant after centrifugation; lane 3, flow through; lane 4, washing with 50 mM imidazole; lane 5, washing with 250 mM imidazole. The arrow represents Per a 9 protein.
Figure 3(A) Analysis of specific IgE reactivity of recombinant Per a 9 by direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Sera were collected from patients with American cockroach (CR) allergies and healthy controls. The values are shown as the means ± SD from triplicate experiments. (B) Western blot analysis of IgE reactivity to Per a 9 sera from the patients with American CR allergy. Lanes 1–3, Per a 9 reacted with the sera from patients 8, 9, 10; lanes 4–5, Per a 9 reacted with sera from control subjects 1 and 2.
Figure 4Induction of basophil activation by recombinant Per a 9. After non-specific IgEs on basophils being stripped off, cells from each donor were passively sensitized with sera from 4 different healthy subjects (A) or from 4 different patients with American cockroach (CR) allergies (B), and were then challenged with Per a 9 at 1.0 μg/ml. The values are shown as the means ± SE for the sera from 4 different subjects. *P<0.05 in comparison with the corresponding carrier alone control.
Figure 5Phylogenetic relationship of Per a 9 allergen amino acid sequence with other homologs.
The predicated secondary structure of Per a 9.
| Secondary structural prediction methods | α-helices | β-sheets |
|---|---|---|
| PSIPRED | 3–12, 25–18, 32–39, 50–56, 73–89, 142–156, 174–183, 193–197, 240–255, 294–303, 35–354 | 66–68, 210–213, 218–223, 229–234, 260–261, 266–268, 279–286, 322–324 |
| NetSurfP ver1.1 | 2–12, 25–28, 32–40, 50–56, 74–89, 142–157, 175–183, 193–197, 239–256, 294–303, 333–354 | 65–69, 120–128, 209–213, 217–223, 227–233, 267–269, 279–286, 307–310, 322–326 |
| PredictProtein | 4–13, 25–28, 32–39, 50–53, 78–89, 142–157, 175–183, 239–256, 294–303, 335–355 | 65–69, 167–170, 208–213, 217–222, 232–234, 267–270, 279–287, 307–311, 322–326 |
| Overall results | 3–12, 25–28, 32–39, 50–56, 74–89, 142–157, 175–183, 193–197, 239–256, 294–303, 335–354 | 65–69, 120–123, 210–213, 218–223, 228–234, 260–261, 280–286, 307–310, 322–326 |
Figure 6Three-dimensional structure and validation of Per a 9 homology model. (A) Protein structure of Per a 9 homology model. (B) Ramachandran plot of the generated homology model. The residures in most favored regions, additional allowed regions, generously allowed regions and disallowed regions are shown in red, yellow, grey and white in the Ramachandran plot, respectively. (C) Validation of the generated homology model by ERRAT program.
Figure 7B cell and T cell epitopes superimposition on the surface of Per a 9 allergen structure. B1–B7 are the predicted B cell epitopes; T1–T7 are the predicted T cell epitopes.
The T cell epitope prediction of Per a 9.
| HLA types | Location of the prediction results |
|---|---|
| HLA-DR 101 | 7–15, 14–22, 17–25, 23–31, 26–34, 29–37, 35–43, 40–48, 45–53, 46–54, 48–56, 50–58, 67–75, 78–86, 100–108, 117–125, 119–127, 123–131, 128–136, 136–144, 153–161, 156–164, 166–174, 167–175, 168–176, 186–194, 192–200, 194–202, 195–203, 201–209, 210–218, 227–235, 231–239, 238–246, 242–250, 267–275, 268–276, 273–281, 275–283, 277–285, 278–286, 279–287, 282–290, 287–295, 289–297, 290–298, 303–311, 304–312, 305–313, 308–316, 342–350, 348–356, |
| HLA-DR 301 | 68–76, 77–85, 180–188, 211–219, 210–218, 259–267 |
| HLA-DR401 | 26–34, 29–37, 48–56, 49–57, 119–127, 120–128, 170–178, 194–202, 227–235, 228–236, 231–239, 239–247, 242–250, 245–253, 279–287, 282–290, 283–291, 346–354 |
| HLA-DR501 | 8–16, 14–22, 19–27, 22–30, 24–32, 35–43, 118–126, 119–127, 167–175, 185–193, 186–194, 194–202, 195–203, 200–208, 210–218, 239–247, 243–251, 267–275, 278–286, 282–290, 283–291, 284–292, 286–294, 288–296, 289–297, 304–312, 322–330, |
| HLA-DQA10501-DQB10201 | 46–54, 67–75, 65–73, 74–82, 77–85, 186–194, 218–226, 220–228 |
| HLA-DQA10301-DQB10302 | 65–73, 71–79, 72–80, 73–81, 79–87, 154–162, 214–222 |
| HLA-DQA10501-DQB10301 | 2–10, 7–15, 10–18, 12–20, 13–21, 16–24, 44–52, 46–54, 61–69, 66–74, 71–79, 72–80, 89–97, 115–123, 125–133, 169–177, 194–202, 195–203, 212–220, 234–242, 237–245, 243–251, 274–282, 279–287, 283–291, 292–300, 308–316, 218–226, 242–250 |
| HLA-DQA10102-DQB10602 | 12–20, 45–53, 48–56, 62–70, 72–80, 120–128, 154–162, 189–197, 192–200, 195–203, 214–222, 225–233, 228–236, 274–282, 347–355 |
| The final predicted T cell epitopes | 46–54, 65–80, 119–127, 194–202, 210–218, 239–250, 279–290 |