1 / 1

Group B: Ana Rita Domingues, Nicholas Gauthier, Ilka Hoof, Eleonora Kulberkyte, and Nicolas Rapin

Possible HIV Knockout?. Group B: Ana Rita Domingues, Nicholas Gauthier, Ilka Hoof, Eleonora Kulberkyte, and Nicolas Rapin Immunological Bioinformatics, June 2006. Introduction.

alexis
Download Presentation

Group B: Ana Rita Domingues, Nicholas Gauthier, Ilka Hoof, Eleonora Kulberkyte, and Nicolas Rapin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Possible HIV Knockout? Group B: Ana Rita Domingues, Nicholas Gauthier, Ilka Hoof, Eleonora Kulberkyte, and Nicolas Rapin Immunological Bioinformatics, June 2006 Introduction The C-terminal cleavage probability is predicted to be high (see Fig. 3 below) for all MHC class I epitopes, with only one of them containing a strong internal cleavage site. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is one of the worst diseases affecting mankind today. Since it was discovered in 1981, AIDS has become a major pandemic, and has killed approximately 16.3 million people. AIDS is caused by HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) and is spread by sexual contact, infected blood, and can be passed from mother to infant. It is estimated that more than 34 million people are infected worldwide, most of which are in Sub-Saharan Africa and South/Southeast Asia [1,2]. Figure 1: Diagram of HIV with proteins [3]. HIV is a retrovirus, which means it carries its genetic information in the form of RNA and replicates via a DNA intermediate. HIV infects the components of the human immune system such as CD4+ T-cells, dendritic cells and macrophages. Much scientific research has been done to find a treatment/vaccine for HIV. The most common therapies used today are antiretroviral drugs that either interfere with reverse transcription or inhibit the viral protease [2]. Finding a vaccine is a difficult task as HIV mutates frequently and the infection can remain latent for long periods before causing AIDS. This poster aims to present an in silico approach to developing a vaccine for HIV. We have chosen several epitopes from HIV-1 that are predicted to trigger B-cell and T-cell responses. The proteins we focused on were gp120, a surface protein that is involved in the binding of virus to the host cell, and gag, a structural protein from the virus core. The polyprotein gag is cleaved into several sub-proteins of which p24 and p17 are the largest in size. Figure 3: Epitope Atlas of the polytope construct. Generated from the four chosen MHC class I and one MHC class II epitopes. Since proteasomal cleavage is a stochastic process, the epitopes are expected to be frequently processed correctly, presented by MHC class I molecules, and trigger a CD8+ T-cell response. The MHC class II epitope was added to the polytope as there is evidence that even endogenous antigens can be presented by MHC class II molecules in antigen presenting cells. Methods All HIV-1 proteins were processed using NetCTL [4] in order to find putative MHC class I epitopes. NetCTL combines the prediction of the main stages in antigen processing: probability for proteasomal cleavage, TAP transport, and MHC class I binding affinity. Predictions were run on HLA supertypes A1, A2, A3, and B7. These HLA supertypes were used because they cover over 95% of the human population [5]. After extensive screening, gag was chosen because it produced the largest number of high scoring epitopes in NetCTL prediction throughout the selected supertypes. The best epitope for each supertype was chosen based on its NetCTL score and the degree of sequence conservation. The sequence conservation was derived from a multiple sequence alignment of 614 gag sequences provided by the Los Alamos HIV Sequence Database [6]. To maximize the activation of the immune system, MHC class II presentation of gag epitopes was also investigated using the EasyGibbs sampler program [7]. The dataset used to train the Gibbs sampler consisted of known HLA-DR4 epitopes (provided by EasyGibbs). A polytope containing both MHC class I and II epitopeswas generated using a polytope optimization program in order to minimize internal proteasomal cleavage and maximize C-terminal cleavage. B-cell epitopes were predicted using the DiscoTope 1.0 server [8]. A suitable candidate was chosen according to conservation score and visual evaluation of accessibility in the 3D-structure of gp120. Both the B-cell epitope and the highest scoring MHC class II epitope were included into the protein vaccine construct. The 3D-structure of the construct was predicted using the CPHmodels 2.0 server [9]. Figure 4: 3D-structure of the protein-based vaccine predicted by CPHmodels [9]. The B-cell epitope is highlighted in red and the MHC class II epitope is highlighted in blue. As a suitable target to boost B-cell response the surface protein gp120 was chosen. Most putative epitopes which were predicted by DiscoTope were located in loop regions, and as these are highly variable in gp120, the conserved helix 1 was chosen as a qualified B-cell epitope.The peptide vaccine construct consists of the complete gp120 structure 1RZJ (from the Protein Data Bank) into which the predicted MHC class II epitope FYKTLRAEQASQEVKNWM was inserted in the loop region after position 292 (blue in Fig. 4). The 3D-structure appears stable and the B-cell epitope is still accessible (red in Fig. 4). Discussion Throughout the course project we have identified several promising MHC class I, MHC class II, and B-cell epitopes that can be used as possible HIV vaccines. Our final vaccine strategy contains both a polytope that can be used for a DNA vaccine and a peptide that can be used as a protein vaccine. Our strategy is to target and activate both the humoral and cell-mediated immune response in the same vaccine. This strategy should make it very difficult for HIV to survive within a vaccinated individual. Due to time constraints we were unable to consider all aspects needed for a trial vaccine. Autoimmunity could be a problem if antigen in our epitopes closely matches sequestered self antigen. In addition RNA splicing could destroy our polytope and result in lower epitope synthesis. Furthermore it may be beneficial to add ubiquitination signals into the polytope to help target it to be degraded by the proteasome. Placing a signal peptide on the MHC class II epitope which targets it to lysosomes and endosomes can further enhance MHC class II presentation. Results The final polytope construct has a length of 70 amino acids and contains four MHC class I epitopes along with the highest scoring MHC class II epitope. All MHC class I epitopes are positioned in highly conserved a-helical structures (see Fig. 2 below). References [1] - Immunobiology. Janeway, C. et al, Garland Publishing, 2001; [2] - Immunology. Goldsby, R. et al, W.H.Freeman and Company, 2003; [3] - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIV [4] - An integrative approach to CTL epitope prediction. A combined algorithm integrating MHC-I binding, TAP transport efficiency, and proteasomal cleavage predictions. Larsen M.V., Lundegaard C., Kasper Lamberth, Buus S,. Brunak S., Lund O., and Nielsen M. European Journal of Immunology. 35(8): 2295-303. 2005 [5] - Nine major HLA class I supertypes account for the vast preponderance of HLA-A and -B polymorphism. Sette, A., and J. Sidney. 1999. Immunogenetics 50:201-212. [6] - http://hiv-web.lanl.gov [7] - Improved prediction of MHC class I and class II epitopes using a novel Gibbs sampling approach. Nielsen M, Lundegaard C, Worning P, Hvid CS, Lamberth K, Buus S, Brunak S, Lund O. Bioinformatics. 2004 20:1388-97 [8] - Prediction of discontinuous antibody binding epitopes in proteins. Pernille H. Andersen, Morten Nielsen and Ole Lund 2006, submitted [9] - CPHmodels 2.0: X3M a Computer Program to Extract 3D Models. O. Lund, M. Nielsen, C. Lundegaard, P. Worning.. Abstract at the CASP5 conferenceA102, 2002. Figure 2: 3D-structure of HIV-1 p24 and p17 structural proteins. The four predicted MHC class I epitopes are highlighted by overall conservation. Note that the two epitopes in p17 overlap.

More Related