Abstract
BackgroundScrub typhus is a common cause of undiagnosed febrile illness in certain tropical regions, but can be easily treated with antibiotics. The causative agent, Orientia tsutsugamushi, is antigenically variable which complicates diagnosis and efforts towards vaccine development.Methodology/Principal FindingsThis study aimed to dissect the antigenic and genetic relatedness of O. tsutsugamushi strains and investigate sero-diagnostic reactivities by titrating individual patient sera against their O. tsutsugamushi isolates (whole-cell antigen preparation), in homologous and heterologous serum-isolate pairs from the same endemic region in NE Thailand. The indirect immunofluorescence assay was used to titrate Orientia tsutsugamushi isolates and human sera, and a mathematical technique, antigenic cartography, was applied to these data to visualise the antigenic differences and cross-reactivity between strains and sera. No functional or antigen-specific analyses were performed. The antigenic variation found in clinical isolates was much less pronounced than the genetic differences found in the 56kDa type-specific antigen genes. The Karp-like sera were more broadly reactive than the Gilliam-like sera.Conclusions/SignificanceAntigenic cartography worked well with scrub typhus indirect immunofluorescence titres. The data from humoral responses suggest that a Karp-like strain would provide broader antibody cross-reactivity than a Gilliam-like strain. Although previous exposure to O. tsutsugamushi could not be ruled out, scrub typhus patient serum antibody responses were characterised by strong homologous, but weak heterologous antibody titres, with little evidence for cross-reactivity by Gilliam-like sera, but a broader response from some Karp-like sera. This work highlights the importance of antigenic variation in O. tsutsugamushi diagnosis and determination of new serotypes.
Highlights
Orientia tsutsugamushi is an antigenically variable pathogen
We tested how well the antibodies in the blood of patients with scrub typhus recognise different strains of bacteria, and used these results to create a map of the relationships between the bacteria and sera
Genetic analysis of the 56-kDa type-specific antigen (TSA) ORF demonstrated that the 21 Thai O. tsutsugamushi isolates and two additional sera in this study were related to Karp, remained very Gilliam-specific (Gilliam) and TA716 prototype strain genotypes (Fig 1 and Table 2)
Summary
Orientia tsutsugamushi is an antigenically variable pathogen This obligate intracellular bacterium causes scrub typhus, a common tropical rickettsial febrile illness endemic across much of the Asia-Pacific region [1,2,3,4,5]. It was shown that protective immunity to a homologous strain can last several years, but heterologous protection in treated patients and natural disease survivors can last for a few months only This short-lived heterologous, but intermediate to long-lived homologous immunity results in a high recurrence rate of disease, which is further complicated by the broad antigenic heterogeneity of strains [6,8,9]. Scrub typhus is a common cause of undiagnosed febrile illness in certain tropical regions, but can be treated with antibiotics. The causative agent, Orientia tsutsugamushi, is antigenically variable which complicates diagnosis and efforts towards vaccine development.
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