| Literature DB >> 33815393 |
Liriye Kurtovic1,2, David Wetzel3, Linda Reiling1, Damien R Drew1, Catherine Palmer1, Betty Kouskousis1, Eric Hanssen4, Bruce D Wines1,2,5, P Mark Hogarth1,2,5, Manfred Suckow3, Volker Jenzelewski3, Michael Piontek3, Jo-Anne Chan1,2,6, James G Beeson1,2,6,7.
Abstract
RTS,S is the leading malaria vaccine in development, but has demonstrated only moderate protective efficacy in clinical trials. RTS,S is a virus-like particle (VLP) that uses the human hepatitis B virus as scaffold to display the malaria sporozoite antigen, circumsporozoite protein (CSP). Particle formation requires four-fold excess scaffold antigen, and as a result, CSP represents only a small portion of the final vaccine construct. Alternative VLP or nanoparticle platforms that reduce the amount of scaffold antigen and increase the amount of the target CSP antigen present in particles may enhance vaccine immunogenicity and efficacy. Here, we describe the production and characterization of a novel VLP that uses the small surface antigen (dS) of duck hepatitis B virus to display CSP. The CSP-dS fusion protein successfully formed VLPs without the need for excess scaffold antigen, and thus CSP represented a larger portion of the vaccine construct. CSP-dS formed large particles approximately 31-74 nm in size and were confirmed to display CSP on the surface. CSP-dS VLPs were highly immunogenic in mice and induced antibodies to multiple regions of CSP, even when administered at a lower vaccine dosage. Vaccine-induced antibodies demonstrated relevant functional activities, including Fc-dependent interactions with complement and Fcγ-receptors, previously identified as important in malaria immunity. Further, vaccine-induced antibodies had similar properties (epitope-specificity and avidity) to monoclonal antibodies that are protective in mouse models. Our novel platform to produce VLPs without excess scaffold protein has wide implications for the future development of vaccines for malaria and other infectious diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Plasmodium falciparum; RTS,S; circumsporozoite protein (CSP); duck hepatitis B surface antigen; malaria; vaccines; virus-like particle (VLP)
Year: 2021 PMID: 33815393 PMCID: PMC8010251 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.641421
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Schematic of the CSP-dS VLP and summary of the study workflow. CSP-dS VLPs were produced by genetically fusing a truncated form of CSP (including the central-repeat and C-terminal regions, amino acids 199-387) to the small surface protein (dS) of the duck hepatitis B virus (HBV). The CSP-dS fusion protein formed virus-like particles, which were characterized and tested for immunogenicity in mice. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 2Analyses of purified CSP-dS VLP derived from strain Der#949. (A) Reducing SDS-PAGE of CSP-dS VLP purified from strain Der#949 stained with Colloidal blue. A band of expected molecular weight corresponding to CSP-dS was observed at approximately 50 kDa. (B) CSP-dS VLP and rCSP as a control were prepared for Western blot under reducing conditions. Membranes were probed with a monoclonal anti-dS antibody (7C12) and polyclonal anti-CSP antibody.
Figure 3Characterizing the expression of CSP on the VLP surface. (A) Analysis of the particulate character of CSP-dS VLP purified from strain Der#949. Size distribution was determined by DLS before and after analysis by HP-SEC. (B) The structure of CSP-dS VLPs visualized by negative staining TEM. The VLP structures are consistent with the expected size of approximately 31-74 nm. (C) Super-resolution microscopy (N-SIM) was used to visualize CSP-dS VLPs probed with CSP-specific (red) and dS-specific (green) antibodies. Co-localization of CSP and dS are presented in yellow fluorescence. A representative image is shown, and scale bar represents 0.2 μm. (D) Binding of polyclonal anti-CSP antibodies to CSP-dS VLP measured by standard ELISA; mean and range of duplicates are shown.
Summary of production process leading CSP-dS VLP preparation.
| Designation of VLP | CSP-dS VLP |
|---|---|
|
| Der#949 |
| Cell mass generation | Shake flask |
| DCW used for VLP purification [g] | ~6(a) |
| Isolated VLP [mg] | 1.2 ± 0.1 |
| VLP yield per biomass (DCW), YP/X [mg g-1] | ~0.2(a) |
| Product yield per culture volume [mg L-1] | ~2(a) |
| VLP diameter by EM [nm] | 31 - 74 |
| Hydrodynamic VLP diameter by DLS [nm] | 73 (PDI: 0.04)(b) |
| Buoyant density [g cm-3] | 1.14 – 1.15 |
(a)Estimated based on determination of OD600.
(b)Product-containing fraction after analysis by HP-SEC.
Figure 4CSP-dS is immunogenic in mice. Swiss mice were immunized with three 10 μg doses of CSP-dS (n=5; circles) or rCSP as a control (n=5; squares). Serum samples collected after the final immunization were tested for total IgG to (A) full-length CSP, and antigens representing the (B) central-repeat (NANP) and (C) C-terminal (CT) regions of CSP. The x-axis is presented on a log2 scale and the mean and standard deviation of two independent experiments are shown. The AUC for each mouse in CSP-dS and rCSP vaccine groups were compared using the unpaired t-test.
Figure 5Immunization with CSP-dS induces different IgG subclasses and Fc-dependent antibody responses. Swiss mice were immunized with three 10 μg doses of CSP-dS (n=5; circles) or rCSP as a control (n=5; squares). Serum samples collected after the final immunization were tested for (A) anti-CSP IgG subclass responses and (B) Fc-dependent responses against full-length CSP, including C1q-fixation and binding to dimeric FcγRIIa (data from one experiment). Mean and standard deviation are shown and reactivity between the CSP-dS and rCSP vaccine groups were compared using the unpaired t-test.
Correlations between antibody responses in mice after three 10 µg/dose immunizations with CSP-dS or rCSP vaccines (n = 10).
| NANP | CT | IgG1 | IgG2a | IgG2b | IgG3 | C1q | FcγR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CSP | 0.977 | 0.791 | 0.917 | 0.519 | 0.663 | 0.644 | 0.640 | 0.781 |
| NANP | 0.703 | 0.955 | 0.458 | 0.615 | 0.581 | 0.598 | 0.735 | |
| CT | 0.664 | 0.567 | 0.647 | 0.581 | 0.607 | 0.641 | ||
| IgG1 | 0.464 | 0.501 | 0.486 | 0.524 | 0.586 | |||
| IgG2a | 0.627 | 0.906 | 0.934 | 0.214 | ||||
| IgG2b | 0.656 | 0.780 | 0.553 | |||||
| IgG3 | 0.953 | 0.423 | ||||||
| C1q | 0.380 |
Total IgG responses to CSP, NANP and CT antigens; IgG subclass, C1q and FcγR responses to CSP. Pearson’s correlation coefficients are shown, and significant values (p < 0.05) are highlighted in grey.
Figure 6Protective characteristics of CSP-dS induced antibodies. Individual/pooled samples were collected from mice immunized with three 10 μg doses of CSP-dS or rCSP. (A) Serum concentration of NANP-IgG in CSP-dS and rCSP vaccine groups. Mean and SD of one experiment testing the individual samples at three dilutions to calculate antibody concentration. (B) NANP-IgG avidity index in pooled samples was calculated in the presence of 0-10 μg/ml ammonium thiocyanate. (C) Antibody samples (CSP-dS and 2A10 mAb) moderately inhibited the binding of protective human mAb, MGG4, in a competition NANP-IgG ELISA. Mean and range of two independent experiments are shown.
Figure 7Fractional dosing of CSP-dS is immunogenic in mice. C57/BL6 mice were immunized with three 2 μg doses of CSP-dS (mouse #53-57). Serum samples collected after the final immunization were tested for total IgG to (A) full-length CSP, and antigens representing the (B) central-repeat (NANP) and (C) C-terminal (CT) regions of CSP. The x-axis is presented on a log2 scale and the mean and range of two independent experiments are shown.