Menu Close

Prediction of molecular mimicry between antigens from Leishmania sp. and human: Implications for autoimmune response in systemic lupus erythematosus

Authors

Múnera, M., Farak, J., Pérez, M., Rojas, J., Villero, J., Sánchez, A., Sánchez, J., Emiliani, Y.

Journal Paper

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.micpath.2020.104444

Publisher URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/

Publication date

November 2020

Pathogens and humans share an intrinsic relation related to molecular mimicry in their antigens. Interactions between immune system and pathogenic antigens result in a production of antibodies that could protect against infection, but develop autoreactive responses mediated by autoantibodies that react to pathogenic and human antigens because they share epitopes. In this study, a pipeline of bioinformatic tools was used to explore the repertory of autoantigens implicated in the develop of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus and their homologous in Leishmania sp. With this, we screened and selected 33 molecular mimicry candidates. In 17 autoantigens from lupus was possible to perform epitope prediction and was found that, at least one potential cross epitope. Some of autoantigens with molecular mimicry were Aquaporin 4, nuclear autoantigens such as: Ubiquitin-related modifier 1 and Small nuclear ribonucleoprotein Sm. Also, mitochondrial, and ribosomal autoantigens were found to share molecular mimicry with antigens from Leishmania sp. In conclusion, this is the first study that provide evidence of molecular mimicry between antigens from Leishmania sp. and human. Implications for the develop of SLE and clinical manifestation deserve more study.