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Sequence Diversity of the Factor H Binding Protein Vaccine Candidate in Epidemiologically Relevant Strains of Serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis

  作者 Murphy, E; Andrew, L; Lee, KL; Dilts, DA; Nunez, L; Fink, PS; Ambrose, K; Borrow, R; Findlow, J; Taha, MK; Deghmane, AE; Kriz, P; Musilek, M; Kalmusova, J; Caugant, DA; Alvestad, T; Mayer, LW; Sacchi, CT; Wang, X; Martin, D; von Gottberg, A; du Plessis, M; Klugman, KP; Anderson, AS; Jansen, KU; Zlotnick, GW; Hoiseth, SK  
  选自 期刊  Journal of Infectious Diseases;  卷期  2009年200-3;  页码  379-389  
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[摘要]Background. Recombinant forms of Neisseria meningitidis human factor H binding protein (fHBP) are undergoing clinical trials in candidate vaccines against invasive meningococcal serogroup B disease. We report an extensive survey and phylogenetic analysis of the diversity of fhbp genes and predicted protein sequences in invasive clinical isolates obtained in the period 2000-2006.Methods. Nucleotide sequences of fhbp genes were obtained from 1837 invasive N. meningitidis serogroup B (MnB) strains from the United States, Europe, New Zealand, and South Africa. Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) analysis was performed on a subset of the strains.Results. Every strain contained the fhbp gene. All sequences fell into 1 of 2 subfamilies (A or B), with 60%-75% amino acid identity between subfamilies and at least 83% identity within each subfamily. One fHBP sequence may have arisen via inter-subfamily recombination. Subfamily B sequences were found in 70% of the isolates, and subfamily A sequences were found in 30%. Multiple fHBP variants were detected in each of the common MLST clonal complexes. All major MLST complexes include strains in both subfamily A and subfamily B.Conclusions. The diversity of strains observed underscores the importance of studying the distribution of the vaccine antigen itself rather than relying on common epidemiological surrogates such as MLST.

 
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