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Generation of antigenic variants via gene conversion: Evidence for recombination fitness selection at the locus level in Anaplasma marginale.

TitleGeneration of antigenic variants via gene conversion: Evidence for recombination fitness selection at the locus level in Anaplasma marginale.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsFutse, JE, Brayton, KA, Nydam, SD, Palmer, GH
JournalInfect Immun
Volume77
Issue8
Pagination3181-7
Date Published2009 Aug
ISSN1098-5522
KeywordsAnaplasma marginale, Anaplasmosis, Animals, Antigens, Bacterial, Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins, Bacterial Proteins, Cattle, Gene Conversion, Selection, Genetic
Abstract

Multiple bacterial and protozoal pathogens utilize gene conversion to generate antigenically variant surface proteins to evade immune clearance and establish persistent infection. Both the donor alleles that encode the variants following recombination into an expression site and the donor loci themselves are under evolutionary selection: the alleles that encode variants that are sufficiently antigenically unique yet retain growth fitness and the loci that allow efficient recombination. We examined allelic usage in generating Anaplasma marginale variants during in vivo infection in the mammalian reservoir host and identified preferential usage of specific alleles in the absence of immune selective pressure, consistent with certain individual alleles having a fitness advantage for in vivo growth. In contrast, the loci themselves appear to have been essentially equally selected for donor function in gene conversion with no significant effect of locus position relative to the expression site or origin of replication. This pattern of preferential allelic usage but lack of locus effect was observed independently for Msp2 and Msp3 variants, both generated by gene conversion. Furthermore, there was no locus effect observed when a single locus contained both msp2 and msp3 alleles in a tail-to-tail orientation flanked by a repeat. These experimental results support the hypothesis that predominance of specific variants reflects in vivo fitness as determined by the encoding allele, independent of locus structure and chromosomal position. Identification of highly fit variants provides targets for vaccines that will prevent the high-level bacteremia associated with acute disease.

DOI10.1128/IAI.00348-09
Alternate JournalInfect. Immun.
PubMed ID19487473
PubMed Central IDPMC2715667
Grant ListAI44005 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
GR075800M / / Wellcome Trust / United Kingdom
T32 GM008336 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM008336-18 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM008336-19 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM008336-20 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States