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Serodiagnostic antigens of Clonorchis sinensis identified and evaluated by high-throughput proteogenomics

Cited 5 time in Web of Science Cited 5 time in Scopus
Authors

Cho, Pyo Yun; Lee, Ji-Yun; Kim, Tae Im; Song, Jin-Ho; Hong, Sung-Jong; Yoo, Won Gi; Tsuboi, Takafumi; Ha, Kwon-Soo; Jung, Jae-Wan; Takeo, Satoru; Han, Eun-Taek; Sripa, Banchob; Hong, Sung-Tae; Chai, Jong-Yil; Nam, Ho-Woo; Pak, Jhang Ho; Kim, Tong-Soo

Issue Date
2020-12
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Citation
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Vol.14 No.12, pp.e0008998-15
Abstract
Author summary Human clonorchiasis is a parasitic disease caused by the Chinese liver fluke, Clonorchis sinensis. Humans are infected through eating raw freshwater fishes carrying C. sinensis metacercariae, the encysted larvae. They excyst in the duodenum, move into the liver via bile duct and grow to adult worms. Excretory-secretory products of the worm damage the liver causing various inflammatory pathological changes and may lead to bile duct cancer. Although there exists an anthelmintic choice praziquantel to kill the fluke, emphasis is placed on early diagnosis and prevention before the infection becomes disease. Microscopic stool examination is the standard diagnostic method but is cumbersome and time consuming. Blood serum antibodies from clonorchiasis patients could provide a simple and fast diagnosis. However, antibody detecting diagnostics developed so far have a low specificity and sensitivity. In the present study we selected 607 antigenic candidate proteins from the genomic database and synthesized them through an integrated high-throughput proteogenomic tools. We identified several antigenic proteins and evaluated their diagnostic potential for clonorchiasis. One of them, CsAg17, showed a high sensitivity and specificity. This antigen deserves development of point-of-care serodiagnostics for C. sinensis infections. Clonorchiasis caused by Clonorchis sinensis is endemic in East Asia; approximately 15 million people have been infected thus far. To diagnose the infection, serodiagnostic tests with excellent functionality should be performed. First, 607 expressed sequence tags encoding polypeptides with a secretory signal were expressed into recombinant proteins using an in vitro translation system. By protein array-based screening using C. sinensis-infected sera, 18 antigen candidate proteins were selected and assayed for cross-reactivity against Opisthorchis viverrini-infected sera. Of the six antigenic proteins selected, four were synthesized on large scale in vitro and evaluated for antigenicity against the flukes-infected human sera using ELISA. CsAg17 antigen showed the highest sensitivity (77.1%) and specificity (71.2%). The sensitivity and specificity of the bacterially produced CsAg17-28GST fusion antigen was similar to those of CsAg17 antigen. CsAg17 antigen can be used to develop point-of-care serodiagnostic tests for clonorchiasis.
ISSN
1935-2727
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/200480
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0008998
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  • College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Department of Veterinary Medicine
Research Area Microbiology, Parasitology, Tropical Medicine

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