Design and characterization of a multistage peptide-based vaccine platform to target Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection
Chiara Bellini, Emil Joseph Vergara, Fruzsina Bencs, Szilvia Bősze, Denis Krivić, Bernadett Bacsa, Sára Eszter Surguta, József Tóvári, et al. (10 authors)
Abstract
The complex immunopathology\nofMycobacterium tuberculosis(<i>Mtb</i>) is one of the main challenges in developing\na novel vaccine against this pathogen, particularly regarding eliciting\nprotection against both active and latent stages. Multistage vaccines,\nwhich contain antigens expressed in both phases, represent a promising\nstrategy for addressing this issue, as testified by the tuberculosis\nvaccine clinical pipeline. Given this approach, we designed and characterized\na multistage peptide-based vaccine platform containing CD4+ and CD8+\nT cell epitopes previously validated for inducing a relevant T cell\nresponse against <i>Mtb</i>. After preliminary screening,\nCFP10 (32–39), GlfT2 (4–12), HBHA (185–194),\nand PPE15 (1–15) were selected as promising candidates, and\nwe proved that the <b>PM1</b> pool of these peptides triggered\na T cell response in <i>Mtb</i>-sensitized human peripheral\nblood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Taking advantage of the use of thiol-maleimide\nchemoselective ligation, we synthesized a multiepitope conjugate (<b>Ac-CGHP</b>). Our results showed a structure–activity relationship\nbetween the conjugation and a higher tendency to fold and assume an\nordered secondary structure. Moreover, the palmitoylated conjugate\n(<b>Pal-CGHP</b>) comprising the same peptide antigens was associated\nwith an enhanced cellular uptake in human and murine antigen-presenting\ncells and a better immunogenicity profile. Immunization study, conducted\nin BALB/c mice, showed that <b>Pal-CGHP</b> induced a significantly\nhigher T cell proliferation and production of IFNγ and TNFα\nover <b>PM1</b> formulated in the Sigma Adjuvant System.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Virology
- Microbiology
- Tuberculosis
- Biology