| Literature DB >> 29719713 |
Yanira Méndez1, Janoi Chang2, Ana R Humpierre1, Abel Zanuy2, Raine Garrido2, Aldrin V Vasco1,3, Jessy Pedroso2, Darielys Santana2, Laura M Rodríguez2, Dagmar García-Rivera2, Yury Valdés2, Vicente Vérez-Bencomo2, Daniel G Rivera1,3.
Abstract
A new synthetic strategy for the development of multivalent antibacterial glycoconjugate vaccines is described. The approach comprises the utilization of an isocyanide-based multicomponent process for the conjugation of functionalized capsular polysaccharides of S. pneumoniae and S. Typhi to carrier proteins such as diphtheria and tetanus toxoids. For the first time, oxo- and carboxylic acid-functionalized polysaccharides could be either independently or simultaneously conjugated to immunogenic proteins by means of the Ugi-multicomponent reaction, thus leading to mono- or multivalent unimolecular glycoconjugates as vaccine candidates. Despite the high molecular weight of the two or three reacting biomolecules, the multicomponent bioconjugation proved highly efficient and reproducible. The Ugi-derived glycoconjugates showed notable antigenicity and elicited good titers of functional specific antibodies. To our knowledge, this is the only bioconjugation method that enables the incorporation of two different polysaccharidic antigens to a carrier protein in a single step. Applications in the field of self-adjuvanting, eventually anticancer, multicomponent vaccines are foreseeable.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29719713 PMCID: PMC5897956 DOI: 10.1039/c7sc05467j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Scheme 1Multicomponent bioconjugation of oxo-functionalized CPs (putative truncated fragments are shown to represent the repetitive units of CPs) of S. pneumoniae to (A) non-activated DT and TT and (B) hydrazide-activated DT and TT. (C) Repetitive units of the CPs of S. pneumoniae serotypes 14, 7F and 9V, used as oxo-components after periodic oxidation.
Fig. 1(A) Antigenicity evaluation of conjugates 14-TTa, 7F-TTa and 9V-TTa by ELISA with: (i) a specific anti-CPs14 antibody, (ii) a specific anti-CPs7F antibody and (iii) a specific anti-CPs9V antibody. (B) Anti-CPs IgG titers elicited in mice by the glycoconjugates, as determined by ELISA: (i) 14-TTa and 14-DTa, (ii) 7F-TTa and 7F-DTa and (iii) 9V-TTa. (C) Assessment of the presence, in the bleed-sera, of specific antibodies against: (i) an Ugi-derived BSA–dextran conjugate and (ii) the CPs14. The scale 1 to 6 is a serial dilution (1/2) from 1 : 100 to 1 : 3200.
Scheme 2(A) Multicomponent conjugation of CPsVi to hydrazide-activated DT and TT. (B) Anti-Vi IgG titers elicited in mice by conjugates Vi-TTa and Vi-DTa, as determined by ELISA.
Scheme 3(A) Generation of carboxylic acid groups on CPs14 by TEMPO oxidation. (B) Multicomponent bioconjugation of carboxylic acid-functionalized CPs14 and oxo-functionalized CPs7F of S. pneumoniae to activated TT as the amino-component. (C) Antigenicity evaluation by ELISA of bivalent glycoconjugate 14-TTa-7F, in comparison with their individual CPs and monovalent conjugates using the specific anti-CPs14 and anti-CPs7F antibodies.
Fig. 2Assessment of the double immunogenicity of the glycoconjugate CPs14-TTa-CPs7F in comparison with the individual CPs and the monovalent conjugates, as determined by ELISA. IgG titers elicited in mice against (A) CPs7F and (B) CPs14.
Pneumococcal serotypes 14 and 7F OPA assays for the immune sera of conjugates CPs14-TTa, CPs7F-TTa and CPs14-TTa-CPs7F
| Conjugate | OPA titers against CPs14 | OPA titers against CPs7F |
| CPs14-TTa | >256 | — |
| CPs7F-TTa | — | 128 |
| CPs14-TTa-CPs7F | >256 | 128 |