| Literature DB >> 29126399 |
Andris Kazaks1, I-Na Lu2, Sophie Farinelle2, Alex Ramirez3, Vincenzo Crescente3, Benjamin Blaha4, Olotu Ogonah4, Tarit Mukhopadhyay4, Mapi Perez de Obanos5, Alejandro Krimer5, Inara Akopjana6, Janis Bogans6, Velta Ose6, Anna Kirsteina6, Tatjana Kazaka6, Nicola J Stonehouse7, David J Rowlands7, Claude P Muller2, Kaspars Tars6,8, William M Rosenberg3,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The lack of a universal influenza vaccine is a global health problem. Interest is now focused on structurally conserved protein domains capable of eliciting protection against a broad range of influenza virus strains. The long alpha helix (LAH) is an attractive vaccine component since it is one of the most conserved influenza hemagglutinin (HA) stalk regions. For an improved immune response, the LAH domain from H3N2 strain has been incorporated into virus-like particles (VLPs) derived from hepatitis B virus core protein (HBc) using recently developed tandem core technology.Entities:
Keywords: Influenza vaccine; Long alpha helix; Tandem-core; Virus-like particles; Yeast
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29126399 PMCID: PMC5681787 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-017-0396-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Fig. 1a Design of the HBc K1-K1 construct. Amino acid sequences of inserted lysine linkers are showed in upper part. Below, introduced unique restriction sites at both ends of the linkers (XbaI/NotI in Core1 and EcoRI/NheI in Core2) are underlined. Purified K1-K1 VLPs were characterized by Coomassie-stained PAAG (b) and electron microscopy (c)
Fig. 2Construction and expression of the recombinant LAH3-HBc gene. Design (a) and cartoon (b) of the LAH3-HBc dimer. Individual HBc monomers are coloured in green and orange. First MIR contains the LAH domain (represented as random pink spheres) while the second MIR contains lysine linker (blue spheres). The model was created using PyMOL version 1.7rc1. The tandem core dimer was based on the structure from PDB-1QGT, with the linker added in black. c LAH3-HBc fermentation profile. Dissolved oxygen tension (DOT) was maintained above 30% through agitation control (N) between 400 to 1000 rpm. Biomass was monitored post-induction by wet cell weight (WCW) analysis
Fig. 3Extraction of the LAH3-HBc protein from yeast cell lysates. a Coomassie-stained PAAG illustrating individual purification steps. Target protein corresponding band is marked by arrowhead. Sup, protein content in cell supernatant; PEG, protein precipitate loaded onto SEC column; 1–5, SEC fractions corresponding to column profile (b). c Electron microscopy analysis of VLP region from SEC elution
Fig. 4Final purification (a) and characterization (b-e) of LAH3-HBc VLPs. a Fractogel TMAE chromatography profile. VLP and free nucleic acid (NA) peaks are indicated. b Coomassie-stained PAAG of final product after dialysis and concentration. 1, 2 and 4 μl of protein are loaded per track. c Western blotting of final product. Lane 1, negative control; lane 2, K1-K1 VLPs; lane 3, LAH3-HBc VLPs. Full-length protein and product related bands are marked by arrowhead and asterix, respectively. d Nucleic acid content of final product in native agarose gel. Visible is only VLP-associated NA band (indicated by arrowhead). e Quality of LAH3-HBc VLPs verified by electron microscopy
Fig. 5Reactivity of mouse sera with recombinant group 2 HA proteins (H3, H4, H7, H10, H14 and H15). Mice were immunized with LAH3-HBc VLPs or adjuvant alone (“Mock”). The panels show the mean and standard deviation of the optical density at 405 nm of the sera of 16 mice per group and are representative of two distinct experiments
Fig. 6Reactivity of mouse sera with recombinant group 1 HA proteins (seasonal HA1, pandemic H1, H2, H5, H9 and H11). The mouse sera were the same as for Fig. 5. The panels show the mean and standard deviation of the optical density at 405 nm of the sera of 16 mice per group and are representative of two distinct experiments
Fig. 7Reactivity of individual mouse sera (OD405 of a 1:300 serum dilution from Figs. 5 and 6) with homologous group 2 (a) and heterologous group 1 HA antigens (b) after immunization with LAH3-HBc VLPs (N = 16) or after mock (N = 16) immunization. c shows the same aggregated results by reactivity with group 1 or group 2 antigens. The threshold for positivity (dotted line) is defined by comparison to the mock i.e. adjuvant only immunized mice