Combination of human papillomaviruses L1 and L2 multiepitope constructs protects mice against tumor cells.
Ali NamvarAzam BolhassaniGholamreza JavadiZahra NoormohammadiPublished in: Fundamental & clinical pharmacology (2021)
Different types of cancer including cervical (>90%), anal (~88%), vaginal (~40%), and penile (~40%) cancers are associated with human papillomaviruse (HPV) infections. Three prophylactic vaccines (Cervarix, Gardasil, and Gardasil-9) were approved to provide immuno-protection against certain types of HPVs. Currently, next-generation HPV vaccines such as L1/L2-based vaccines are being developed to provide broad-type HPV protection. In this study, we introduced a comprehensive framework for design of L1/L2 polyepitope-based HPV vaccine candidate. This framework started with protein sequence retrieval and followed by conservancy analysis between high-risk HPVs, MHC-I and MHC-II epitope mapping, and B-cell and T-cell epitope mapping. Subsequently, we performed Tap transport and proteasomal cleavage, population coverage, antigenicity, allergenicity and cross-reactivity. After that, peptide-MHCI/II flexible docking and comprehensive conservancy analysis against all HPV types were carried out. The next steps were prediction of interferon-gamma and interleukin-10 inducing epitopes, epitope selection and construct design, tertiary structure prediction, refinement and validation, discontinuous B-cell epitope prediction, vaccine-TLR4 molecular docking, and codon optimization. Our data showed that two designed vaccine constructs harboring 8 L1 peptides or 7 L2 peptides, individually were highly conserved between all well-known HPV types. In addition, the combination of in silico/in vivo approaches indicated the potential ability of L1 and L2 polyepitope constructs for development of next generation prophylactic/therapeutic HPV vaccine.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- molecular docking
- cervical cancer screening
- endothelial cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- prostate cancer
- inflammatory response
- high resolution
- amino acid
- dendritic cells
- squamous cell carcinoma
- immune response
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- transcription factor
- electronic health record
- skeletal muscle
- big data
- healthcare
- toll like receptor
- pluripotent stem cells
- affordable care act