Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.

SURFINs protein family expressed on surface of both infected red blood cell and merozoite surface making them as interesting vaccine candidate for erythrocytic stage of malaria infection. In this study, we analyze genetic variation of Pfsurf4.1 gene, copy number variation, and frequency of SURFIN4.1...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nitchakarn Noranate, Jariya Sripanomphong, Fingani Annie Mphande-Nyasulu, Suwanna Chaorattanakawee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312091
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841533116574859264
author Nitchakarn Noranate
Jariya Sripanomphong
Fingani Annie Mphande-Nyasulu
Suwanna Chaorattanakawee
author_facet Nitchakarn Noranate
Jariya Sripanomphong
Fingani Annie Mphande-Nyasulu
Suwanna Chaorattanakawee
author_sort Nitchakarn Noranate
collection DOAJ
description SURFINs protein family expressed on surface of both infected red blood cell and merozoite surface making them as interesting vaccine candidate for erythrocytic stage of malaria infection. In this study, we analyze genetic variation of Pfsurf4.1 gene, copy number variation, and frequency of SURFIN4.1 variants of P. falciparum in clinical isolates. In addition, secondary structure prediction and immunoinformatic were employed to identify immunogenic epitopes in humoral response as proposed vaccine candidates. Overall, our data demonstrate extensive polymorphism of SURFIN4.1 in both genetic and protein level. The surf4.1 gene showed extensive genetic variation with total of 447 polymorphic sites with maximum of three variants as well as singlet/triplet bases indels and mini/microsatellites in the coding sequence. The exon1 encoding extracellular region exhibited higher variation compared to exon2 which coding for intracellular domain. Interestingly, selective pressure was detected on both extracellular region (Var1 and Var2) as well as intracellular region (WRD2 and WRD3). Importantly, extensive full gene analysis suggests adenosine insertion at three key points nucleotide bases (nt 2409/2410, 3809/3810, and 4439/4440) of exon2 could lead to frameshift mutation resulted in four different SURFIN4.1 variants (TMs, WD1, WD2 and WD3). The SURFIN4.1 variant TMs was the most observed type with 67% frequency (51/76). Along with more than one copy number of surf4.1 gene was observed with frequency of 13% (9/70). Despite substantial polymorphism, analysis of relatedness within P. falciparum population using full coding sequence was able to group SURFIN4.1 protein into five distinct clades and reduced into four clades when using only exon1 coding sequence. Also, predicted secondary structure revealed conserved structure of five helix domains of extracellular region which similar among four SURFIN4.1 variant types. In addition, in silico design eight immunopeptides derived from SURFIN4.1, four of which are highly conserved and four of dimorphic epitopes, as potential vaccine candidates.
format Article
id doaj-art-b947b5652d5d4be0b1d6c31d9efb035b
institution Kabale University
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2024-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-b947b5652d5d4be0b1d6c31d9efb035b2025-01-17T05:31:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-011912e031209110.1371/journal.pone.0312091Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.Nitchakarn NoranateJariya SripanomphongFingani Annie Mphande-NyasuluSuwanna ChaorattanakaweeSURFINs protein family expressed on surface of both infected red blood cell and merozoite surface making them as interesting vaccine candidate for erythrocytic stage of malaria infection. In this study, we analyze genetic variation of Pfsurf4.1 gene, copy number variation, and frequency of SURFIN4.1 variants of P. falciparum in clinical isolates. In addition, secondary structure prediction and immunoinformatic were employed to identify immunogenic epitopes in humoral response as proposed vaccine candidates. Overall, our data demonstrate extensive polymorphism of SURFIN4.1 in both genetic and protein level. The surf4.1 gene showed extensive genetic variation with total of 447 polymorphic sites with maximum of three variants as well as singlet/triplet bases indels and mini/microsatellites in the coding sequence. The exon1 encoding extracellular region exhibited higher variation compared to exon2 which coding for intracellular domain. Interestingly, selective pressure was detected on both extracellular region (Var1 and Var2) as well as intracellular region (WRD2 and WRD3). Importantly, extensive full gene analysis suggests adenosine insertion at three key points nucleotide bases (nt 2409/2410, 3809/3810, and 4439/4440) of exon2 could lead to frameshift mutation resulted in four different SURFIN4.1 variants (TMs, WD1, WD2 and WD3). The SURFIN4.1 variant TMs was the most observed type with 67% frequency (51/76). Along with more than one copy number of surf4.1 gene was observed with frequency of 13% (9/70). Despite substantial polymorphism, analysis of relatedness within P. falciparum population using full coding sequence was able to group SURFIN4.1 protein into five distinct clades and reduced into four clades when using only exon1 coding sequence. Also, predicted secondary structure revealed conserved structure of five helix domains of extracellular region which similar among four SURFIN4.1 variant types. In addition, in silico design eight immunopeptides derived from SURFIN4.1, four of which are highly conserved and four of dimorphic epitopes, as potential vaccine candidates.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312091
spellingShingle Nitchakarn Noranate
Jariya Sripanomphong
Fingani Annie Mphande-Nyasulu
Suwanna Chaorattanakawee
Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
PLoS ONE
title Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
title_full Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
title_fullStr Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
title_full_unstemmed Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
title_short Plasmodium falciparum surf4.1 in clinical isolates: From genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development.
title_sort plasmodium falciparum surf4 1 in clinical isolates from genetic variation and variant diversity to in silico design immunopeptides for vaccine development
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0312091
work_keys_str_mv AT nitchakarnnoranate plasmodiumfalciparumsurf41inclinicalisolatesfromgeneticvariationandvariantdiversitytoinsilicodesignimmunopeptidesforvaccinedevelopment
AT jariyasripanomphong plasmodiumfalciparumsurf41inclinicalisolatesfromgeneticvariationandvariantdiversitytoinsilicodesignimmunopeptidesforvaccinedevelopment
AT finganianniemphandenyasulu plasmodiumfalciparumsurf41inclinicalisolatesfromgeneticvariationandvariantdiversitytoinsilicodesignimmunopeptidesforvaccinedevelopment
AT suwannachaorattanakawee plasmodiumfalciparumsurf41inclinicalisolatesfromgeneticvariationandvariantdiversitytoinsilicodesignimmunopeptidesforvaccinedevelopment