Visceral leishmaniasis is a protozoal disease caused by the intracellular parasites Leishmania donovani and L. chagasi/infantum, and it is usually deadly if not treated. To date, no vaccine exists for prophylaxis or immunotherapy, nor has it been established which effector mechanisms of the immune system are most instrumental against the parasites. Recent reports have suggested that CD8 + T cells, in addition to CD4+ T cells, might play major roles in the defense against infection and in the cure of the disease. To identify epitopes recognized by CD8+ T cells that can be used for immune monitoring to investigate the role of these cells in human visceral leishmaniasis, as well as in vaccine development, we scanned the entire sequence of the leishmanial protein kinetoplastid membrane protein (kmp)-11 with overlapping nonapeptides. Thirty peptides that specifically trigger interferon-γ secretion by human CD8+ T cells were identified. Four T cell lines with specificities for different peptides recognize Leishmania-infected autologous macrophages, which proves that kmp-11 is processed and presented via the major histocompatibility complex class I pathway of infected cells. Kmp-11 is thus a candidate antigen for the development of T cell vaccines. © 2007 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Basu, R., Roy, S., & Walden, P. (2007). HLA class I-restricted T cell epitopes of the kinetoplastid membrane protein-11 presented by Leishmania donovani-infected human macrophages. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 195(9), 1373–1380. https://doi.org/10.1086/513439
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