| Literature DB >> 33836177 |
Ali Asghari1, Sadegh Shamsinia2, Hassan Nourmohammadi3, Hamidreza Majidiani4, Mohammad Fatollahzadeh5, Taher Nemati5, Hamid Irannejad6, Hamid Reza Nouri7, Ezatollah Ghasemi8, Morteza Shams9.
Abstract
This study was aimed at designing and evaluation of a multimeric vaccine construct against Toxoplasma gondii via utilization of SAG1 along with apicoplast ribosomal proteins (S2, S5 and L11). Top-ranked MHC-I and MHC-II binding as well as shared, immunodominant linear B-cell epitopes were predicted and joined together via appropriate linkers. Also, TLR-4 agonist (RS-09 synthetic protein) and His-tag were added to the N- and C-terminal of the vaccine sequence. The finally-engineered chimeric vaccine had a length of 291 amino acids with a molecular weight of 31.46 kDa. Physico-chemical features showed a soluble, highly-antigenic and non-allergenic candidate. Secondary and tertiary structures were predicted, and subsequent analyses confirmed the construct stability that was capable to properly interact with human TLR-4. Immunoinformatics-based simulation displayed potent stimulation of T- and B-cell mediated immune responses upon vaccination with the proposed multi-epitope candidate. In conclusion, obtained information demonstrated a highly antigenic vaccine candidate, which could develop high levels of IFN-γ and other components of cellular immune profile, and can be directed for toxoplasmosis prophylactic purposes.Entities:
Keywords: Chimeric vaccine; Immunoinformatics; Toxoplasma gondii
Year: 2021 PMID: 33836177 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejps.2021.105837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pharm Sci ISSN: 0928-0987 Impact factor: 4.384