| Literature DB >> 15363791 |
José Manuel Lozano1, Fabiola Espejo, Marisol Ocampo, Luz Mary Salazar, Diana Tovar, Nubia Barrera, Fanny Guzmán, Manuel Elkin Patarroyo.
Abstract
Antigen structure modulation represents an approach towards designing subunit malaria vaccines. A specific epitope's alpha carbon stereochemistry, as well as its backbone topochemistry, was assessed for obtaining novel malarial immunogens. A variety of MSP-1(38-61) Plasmodium falciparum epitope pseudopeptides derived were synthesised, based on solid-phase pseudopeptide chemistry strategies; these included all-L, all-D, partially-D substituted, all-Psi-[NH-CO]-Retro, all-Psi-[NH-CO]-Retro-inverso, and Psi-[CH2NH] reduced amide surrogates. We demonstrate that specific recombinant MSP-1(34-469) fragment binding to red blood cells (RBCs) is specifically inhibited by non-modified MSP-1(42-61), as well as by its V52-L53, M51-V52 reduced amide surrogates and partial-D substitutions in K48 and E49. In vivo tests revealed that reduced amide pseudopeptide-immunised Aotus monkeys induced neutralising antibodies specifically recognising the MSP-1 N-terminus region. These findings support the role of molecular conformation in malaria vaccine development.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15363791 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2004.04.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Struct Biol ISSN: 1047-8477 Impact factor: 2.867