| Literature DB >> 29904384 |
Mei-Le Keck1, Florian Wrensch2,3, Brian G Pierce4,5, Thomas F Baumert2,3, Steven K H Foung1.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) continues to spread worldwide with an annual increase of 1.75 million new infections. The number of HCV cases in the U.S. is now greater than the number of HIV cases and is increasing in young adults because of the opioid epidemic sweeping the country. HCV-related liver disease is the leading indication of liver transplantation. An effective vaccine is of paramount importance to control and prevent HCV infection. While this vaccine will need to induce both cellular and humoral immunity, this review is focused on the required antibody responses. For highly variable viruses, such as HCV, isolation and characterization of monoclonal antibodies mediating broad virus neutralization are an important guide for vaccine design. The viral envelope glycoproteins, E1 and E2, are the main targets of these antibodies. Epitopes on the E2 protein have been studied more extensively than epitopes on E1, due to higher antibody targeting that reflects these epitopes having higher degrees of immunogenicity. E2 epitopes are overall organized in discrete clusters of overlapping epitopes that ranged from high conservation to high variability. Other epitopes on E1 and E1E2 also are targets of neutralizing antibodies. Taken together, these regions are important for vaccine design. Another element in vaccine design is based on information on how the virus escapes from broadly neutralizing antibodies. Escape mutations can occur within the epitopes that are involved in antibody binding and in regions that are not involved in their epitopes, but nonetheless reduce the efficiency of neutralizing antibodies. An understanding on the specificities of a protective B cell response, the molecular locations of these epitopes on E1, E2, and E1E2, and the mechanisms, which enable the virus to negatively modulate neutralizing antibody responses to these regions will provide the necessary guidance for vaccine design.Entities:
Keywords: antigenic domains; epitopes; hepatitis C virus; human monoclonal antibodies; vaccine design; virus neutralization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29904384 PMCID: PMC5991293 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Immunogenic clusters as defined by antigenic domains.
| Antigenic domain | Epitope location and key elements |
|---|---|
| Hypervariable region 1 | 384–410, mainly isolate-specific linear epitopes mediating neutralization with some interacting with SR-B1 |
| E | 412–423, mainly linear epitopes mediating broad neutralization |
| D | 420–428, 441–443, 616, conformational epitopes on surface layer mediating broad neutralization with a residue 616 located in the back layer |
| B | 431–439, 529–535, conformational epitopes mediating broad neutralization located on the surface layer |
| C | Conformational epitopes mediating broad neutralization located in part at residues 544–549 that is in the central beta sandwich (aa 492–566) |
| A | 581–584, 627–633 conformational epitopes located on the back layer and mediating non-neutralizing antibodies |
Immunogenic clusters as defined by antigenic regions.
| Antigenic region | Epitope location and key elements |
|---|---|
| 1 | E2 non-neutralizing face involving residues 495, 519, 544, 545, 547, 548, 549, and 632 |
| 2 | E2 back layer region involving residues 625 and 628 |
| 3 | E2 neutralizing face involving residues 427–443, 529–530. Residues 459, 499, 503, 558, and 616 influence folding of front layer, and residues 424, 425, 517, 518, 520, 523, 535, 536 influence folding of CD81-binding loop |
| 4 | E1E2 interface with specific residue 698 |
| 5 | E1E2 interface with specific residue 639 and 665 |
Figure 1Structure and mapped epitope sites on the front layer, or neutralizing face, of E2. Structure shown is the E2 core crystal structure (23), with N-terminal residues corresponding to hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) and antigenic domain E (residues 384–423), which are mostly absent or unresolved from the E2 core crystal structure, modeled using the FloppyTail protocol in Rosetta (31) and shown for reference. Epitope sites are colored according to antigenic domains/regions or HVR1, with shared key epitope residues shown as spacefill and labeled. The remainder of E2 is shown as light gray. Representative monoclonal antibodies with binding residues mapped to each domain or HVR1 are also shown.
Figure 2Structure and mapped epitope sites on the back layer and proximal β sandwich residues of E2. The structure corresponds to a distal face of the E2 core structure shown in Figure 1, with antigenic domains/regions labeled and representative monoclonal antibodies listed.