DNA damage drives antigen diversification through mosaic VSG formation in Trypanosoma brucei

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Abstract

Antigenic variation, using large genomic repertoires of antigen-encoding genes, allows pathogens to evade host antibody. Many pathogens, including the African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei, extend their antigenic repertoire through genomic diversification. While evidence suggests that T. brucei relies heavily on the generation of new variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) genes to maintain a chronic infection, a lack of experimentally tractable tools for studying this process has obscured its underlying mechanisms. Here, we present a highly sensitive targeted RNA sequencing approach for measuring VSG diversification. Using this method, we demonstrate that a Cas9-induced DNA double-strand break within the VSG coding sequence can induce VSG recombination with patterns identical to those observed during infection. These newly generated VSGs are antigenically distinct from parental clones and thus capable of facilitating immune evasion. Together, these results provide insight into the mechanisms of VSG diversification and an experimental framework for studying the evolution of antigen repertoires in pathogenic microbes.

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