Many parasites have evolved antigenic variation systems that alter surface proteins in order to evade recognition by presently expressed antibodies and subsequent death. Although the amino acid positions in antigens… Click to show full abstract
Many parasites have evolved antigenic variation systems that alter surface proteins in order to evade recognition by presently expressed antibodies and subsequent death. Although the amino acid positions in antigens to which antibodies most commonly target are expected to be the most variable, this assumption has not been investigated. Using the vls antigenic variation system of Borrelia burgdorferi as a model, we first investigated this assumption computationally and then developed a sensitive immunoassay to experimentally validate the computational results. There was a strong correlation between variability at an amino acid position and each of the computational metrics associated with antibody reactivity. However, empirical measures of antibody reactivity were not consistently greater at the variable amino acid positions than at the invariant amino acid positions. The inconsistent experimental support for this hypothesis suggests that the biological effect of variability at an amino acid position is obfuscated by other factors.
               
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