Design of three-component vaccines against group A streptococcal infections: importance of spatial arrangement of vaccine components

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Abdel-Aal, Abu-Baker M.
Zaman, Mehfuz
Fujita, Yoshio
Good, Michael F.
Batzloff, Michael R.
Toth, Istvan
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2010
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Abstract

Immunological assessment of group A streptococcal (GAS) branched lipopeptides demonstrated the impact of spatial arrangement of vaccine components on both the quality and quantity of their immune responses. Each lipopeptide was composed of three components: a GAS B-cell epitope (J14), a universal CD4+ T-cell helper epitope (P25), and an immunostimulant lipid moiety that differs only in its spatial arrangement. The best systemic immune responses were demonstrated by a lipopeptide featuring the lipid moiety at the lipopeptide C-terminus. However, this candidate did not achieve protection against bacterial challenge. The best protection (100%) was shown by a lipopeptide featuring a C-terminal J14, conjugated through a lysine residue to P25 at the N-terminus, and a lipid moiety on the lysine side chain. The former candidate features a-helical conformation required to produce protective J14-specific antibodies. Our results highlight the importance of epitope orientation and lipid position in the design of three-component synthetic vaccines.

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Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

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53

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22

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Infectious Agents

Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry

Organic Chemistry

Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences

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