Combinatorial Resurfacing of Dengue Envelope Protein Domain III Antigens Selectively Ablates Epitopes Associated with Serotype-Specific or Infection-Enhancing Antibody Responses

被引:3
|
作者
Remmel, Jennifer L. [1 ]
Beauchemin, Kathryn S. [2 ]
Mishra, Akaash K. [2 ]
Frei, Julia C. [3 ]
Lai, Jonathan R. [3 ]
Bailey-Kellogg, Chris [4 ]
Ackerman, Margaret E. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Dartmouth Coll, Thayer Sch Engn, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[2] Dartmouth Coll, Geisel Sch Med, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[3] Albert Einstein Coll Med, Dept Biochem, Bronx, NY 10461 USA
[4] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Comp Sci, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
protein resurfacing; saturation mutagenesis; yeast surface display; directed evolution; epitope-focusing; immunogen design; MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES; DEPENDENT ENHANCEMENT; VIRUS; NEUTRALIZATION; DESIGN;
D O I
10.1021/acscombsci.0c00073
中图分类号
O69 [应用化学];
学科分类号
081704 ;
摘要
Mutagenesis of surface-exposed residues, or "resurfacing", is a protein engineering strategy that can be utilized to disrupt antibody recognition or modulate the capacity of a protein to elicit antibody responses. We apply resurfacing to engineer Dengue virus envelope protein domain III (DENV DIII) antigens with the goal of focusing humoral recognition on epitopes of interest by selective ablation of irrelevant and undesired epitopes. Cross-reactive but non-neutralizing antibodies have the potential to enhance Dengue virus (DENV) infection by a process called antibody-dependent enhancement, thought to be associated with severe secondary heterotypic infection. Thus, a focus on epitopes associated with broadly neutralizing antibodies is important both for understanding human antibody responses against DENV and for the development of a successful DENV vaccine. To engineer DENV DIII antigens focusing on the AG strand epitope associated with broadly neutralizing antibody responses, we generated yeast surface display libraries of DENV2 DIII where the AB loop (associated with cross-reactive but non-neutralizing antibody responses) and FG loop (associated with serotype-specific antibody responses) were mutagenized to allow for all possible amino acid substitutions. Loop variants that maintained the AG strand epitope and simultaneously disrupted the AB and FG loop epitopes exhibited high and diverse mutational loads that were amenable to loop exchange and transplantation into a DENV4 DIII background. Thus, several loop variants fulfill this antigenicity criteria regardless of serotype context. The resulting resurfaced DIII antigens may be utilized as AG strand epitope-focusing probes or immunogen candidates.
引用
收藏
页码:446 / 456
页数:11
相关论文
共 4 条
  • [1] PLANT-BASED RECOMBINANT DENGUE ENVELOPE DOMAIN III (EDIII) ANTIGENS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEROTYPE-SPECIFIC RAPID DIAGNOSTIC KIT
    Subramanian, P.
    Ramalingam, S.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2023, 130 : S94 - S94
  • [2] An external loop region of domain III of dengue virus type 2 envelope protein is involved in serotype-specific binding to mosquito but not mammalian cells
    Hung, JJ
    Hsieh, MT
    Young, MJ
    Kao, CL
    King, CC
    Chang, W
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2004, 78 (01) : 378 - 388
  • [3] A consensus envelope protein domain III can induce neutralizing antibody responses against serotype 2 of dengue virus in non-human primates
    Chen, Hsin-Wei
    Liu, Shih-Jen
    Li, Yi-Shiuan
    Liu, Hsueh-Hung
    Tsai, Jy-Ping
    Chiang, Chen-Yi
    Chen, Mei-Yu
    Hwang, Chyi-Sing
    Huang, Chin-Cheng
    Hu, Hui-Mei
    Chung, Han-Hsuan
    Wu, Sze-Hsien
    Chong, Pele
    Leng, Chih-Hsiang
    Pan, Chien-Hsiung
    ARCHIVES OF VIROLOGY, 2013, 158 (07) : 1523 - 1531
  • [4] A consensus envelope protein domain III can induce neutralizing antibody responses against serotype 2 of dengue virus in non-human primates
    Hsin-Wei Chen
    Shih-Jen Liu
    Yi-Shiuan Li
    Hsueh-Hung Liu
    Jy-Ping Tsai
    Chen-Yi Chiang
    Mei-Yu Chen
    Chyi-Sing Hwang
    Chin-Cheng Huang
    Hui-Mei Hu
    Han-Hsuan Chung
    Sze-Hsien Wu
    Pele Chong
    Chih-Hsiang Leng
    Chien-Hsiung Pan
    Archives of Virology, 2013, 158 : 1523 - 1531