| Literature DB >> 28870518 |
Hayk Davtyan1, Karen Zagorski2, Irina Petrushina3, Konstantin Kazarian2, Natalie R S Goldberg4, Janet Petrosyan2, Mathew Blurton-Jones4, Eliezer Masliah5, David H Cribbs3, Michael G Agadjanyan6, Anahit Ghochikyan7.
Abstract
We have previously demonstrated that anti-beta amyloid DNA vaccine (AV-1959D) based on our proprietary MultiTEP platform technology is extremely immunogenic in mice, rabbits, and monkeys. Importantly, MultiTEP platform enables development of vaccines targeting pathological molecules involved in various neurodegenerative disorders. Taking advantage of the universality of MultiTEP platform, we developed DNA vaccines targeting 3 B-cell epitopes (amino acids [aa]85-99, aa109-126, and aa126-140) of human alpha-synuclein (hα-Syn) separately or all 3 epitopes simultaneously. All 4 DNA vaccines (1) generate high titers of anti-hα-Syn antibodies and (2) induce robust MultiTEP-specific T-helper cell responses without activation of potentially detrimental autoreactive anti-hα-Syn T-helper cells. Generated antibodies recognize misfolded hα-Syn produced by neuroblastoma cells, hα-Syn in the brain tissues of transgenic mouse strains and in the brain tissues of dementia with Lewy body cases. Based on these results, the most promising vaccine targeting 3 B-cell epitopes of hα-Syn simultaneously (PV-1950D) has been chosen for ongoing preclinical assessment in mouse models of hα-Syn with the aim to translate it to the human clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-α-synuclein antibodies; B-cell mapping; DNA vaccines; Immunogenicity; MultiTEP platform; T-cell mapping; Therapeutic potency
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28870518 PMCID: PMC5612893 DOI: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2017.08.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurobiol Aging ISSN: 0197-4580 Impact factor: 4.673