Engineering a vector-based pan-Leishmania vaccine for humans: proof of principle

被引:0
|
作者
Pedro Cecílio
James Oristian
Claudio Meneses
Tiago D. Serafim
Jesus G. Valenzuela
Anabela Cordeiro da Silva
Fabiano Oliveira
机构
[1] Universidade do Porto,i3S
[2] Universidade do Porto, Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde
[3] Departamento de Ciências Biológicas,Parasite Disease Group, IBMC
[4] Faculdade de Farmácia da Universidade do Porto (FFUP), Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular
[5] National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,Vector Molecular Biology Section, Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research
[6] National Institutes of Health,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Leishmaniasis is a spectrum of diseases transmitted by sand fly vectors that deposit Leishmania spp. parasites in the host skin during blood feeding. Currently, available treatment options are limited, associated with high toxicity and emerging resistance. Even though a vaccine for human leishmaniasis is considered an achievable goal, to date we still do not have one available, a consequence (amongst other factors) of a lack of pre-clinical to clinical translatability. Pre-exposure to uninfected sand fly bites or immunization with defined sand fly salivary proteins was shown to negatively impact infection. Still, cross-protection reports are rare and dependent on the phylogenetic proximity of the sand fly species, meaning that the applicability of a sand fly saliva-based vaccine will be limited to a defined geography, one parasite species and one form of leishmaniasis. As a proof of principle of a future vector saliva-based pan-Leishmania vaccine, we engineered through a reverse vaccinology approach that maximizes translation to humans, a fusion protein consisting of immunogenic portions of PdSP15 and LJL143, sand fly salivary proteins demonstrated as potential vaccine candidates against cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis, respectively. The in silico analysis was validated ex vivo, through T cell proliferation experiments, proving that the fusion protein (administered as a DNA vaccine) maintained the immunogenicity of both PdSP15 and LJL143. Additionally, while no significant effect was detected in the context of L. major transmission by P. duboscqi, this DNA vaccine was defined as partially protective, in the context of L. major transmission by L. longipalpis sand flies. Importantly, a high IFNγ response alone was not enough to confer protection, that mainly correlated with low T cell mediated Leishmania-specific IL-4 and IL-10 responses, and consequently with high pro/anti-inflammatory cytokine ratios. Overall our immunogenicity data suggests that to design a potentially safe vector-based pan-Leishmania vaccine, without geographic restrictions and against all forms of leishmaniasis is an achievable goal. This is why we propose our approach as a proof-of principle, perhaps not only applicable to the anti-Leishmania vector-based vaccines’ field, but also to other branches of knowledge that require the design of multi-epitope T cell vaccines with a higher potential for translation.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Engineering a vector-based pan-Leishmania vaccine for humans: proof of principle
    Cecilio, Pedro
    Oristian, James
    Meneses, Claudio
    Serafim, Tiago D.
    Valenzuela, Jesus G.
    Cordeiro da Silva, Anabela
    Oliveira, Fabiano
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2020, 10 (01)
  • [2] Adenovirus vector-based vaccine for infectious diseases
    Sakurai, Fuminori
    Tachibana, Masashi
    Mizuguchi, Hiroyuki
    DRUG METABOLISM AND PHARMACOKINETICS, 2022, 42
  • [3] Development of adenoviral vector-based mucosal vaccine against influenza
    Irina L. Tutykhina
    Denis Y. Logunov
    Dmitriy N. Shcherbinin
    Maxim M. Shmarov
    Amir I. Tukhvatulin
    Boris S. Naroditsky
    Alexander L. Gintsburg
    Journal of Molecular Medicine, 2011, 89 : 331 - 341
  • [4] Development of adenoviral vector-based mucosal vaccine against influenza
    Tutykhina, Irina L.
    Logunov, Denis Y.
    Shcherbinin, Dmitriy N.
    Shmarov, Maxim M.
    Tukhvatulin, Amir I.
    Naroditsky, Boris S.
    Gintsburg, Alexander L.
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM, 2011, 89 (04): : 331 - 341
  • [5] COVID-19 vector-based vaccine causing thrombosis
    Hendaus, Mohamed A.
    Jomha, Fatima A.
    JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS, 2022, 40 (19): : 9568 - 9570
  • [6] Safety and immunogenicity of a recombinant adenovirus vector-based Ebola vaccine
    Grobusch, Martin P.
    Goorhuis, Abraham
    LANCET, 2017, 389 (10069): : 578 - 580
  • [7] DHEAS as an effective vaccine adjuvant in elderly humans - Proof-of-principle studies
    Araneo, B
    Dowell, T
    Woods, ML
    Daynes, R
    Judd, M
    Evans, T
    DEHYDROEPIANDROSTERONE (DHEA) AND AGING, 1995, 774 : 232 - 248
  • [8] Bioengineering AAV6 vector-based vaccine for cancer treatment
    Krotova, Karina
    Day, Andrew
    Hinchcliffe, Edward
    Aslanidi, George
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2019, 79 (13)
  • [9] An adenoviral vector-based mucosal vaccine is effective in protection against botulism
    Q Xu
    M E Pichichero
    L L Simpson
    Md Elias
    L A Smith
    M Zeng
    Gene Therapy, 2009, 16 : 367 - 375
  • [10] Lentiviral vector-based vaccine against SIV infection and simian AIDS
    Beignon, A.
    Mollier, K.
    Liard, C.
    Munier, S.
    Riviere, J.
    Coutant, F.
    Boulay, A.
    Caleechurn, L.
    Souque, P.
    Bauche, C.
    Charneau, P.
    RETROVIROLOGY, 2009, 6