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Bioinformatics analysis of structural protein to approach a vaccine candidate against Vibrio cholerae infection.

Authors :
Oladipo, Elijah Kolawole
Akindiya, Olawumi Elizabeth
Oluwasanya, Glory Jesudara
Akanbi, Gideon Mayowa
Olufemi, Seun Elijah
Adediran, Daniel Adewole
Bamigboye, Favour Oluwadara
Aremu, Rasidat Oyindamola
Kolapo, Kehinde Temitope
Oluwasegun, Jerry Ayobami
Awobiyi, Hezekiah Oluwajoba
Jimah, Esther Moradeyo
Irewolede, Boluwatife Ayobami
Folakanmi, Elizabeth Oluwatoyin
Olubodun, Odunola Abimbola
Akintibubo, Samuel Adebowale
Odunlami, Foluso Daniel
Ojo, Taiwo Ooreoluwa
Akinro, Omodamola Paulina
Hezikiah, Oluwaseun Samuel
Source :
Immunogenetics. Apr2023, Vol. 75 Issue 2, p99-114. 16p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The bacteria Vibrio cholerae causes cholera, an acute diarrheal infection that can lead to dehydration and even death. Over 100,000 people die each year as a result of epidemic diseases; vaccination has emerged as a successful strategy for combating cholera. This study uses bioinformatics tools to create a multi-epitope vaccine against cholera infection using five structural polyproteins from the V. cholerae (CTB, TCPA, TCPF, OMPU, and OMPW). The antigenic retrieved protein sequence were analyzed using BCPred and IEDB bioinformatics tools to predict B cell and T cell epitopes, respectively, which were then linked with flexible linkers together with an adjuvant to boost it immunogenicity. The construct has a theoretical PI of 6.09, a molecular weight of 53.85 kDa, and an estimated half-life for mammalian reticulocytes in vitro of 4.4 h. These results demonstrate the construct's longevity. The vaccine design was docked against the human toll-like receptor (TLR) to evaluate compatibility and effectiveness; also other additional post-vaccination assessments were carried out on the designed vaccine. Through in silico cloning, its expression was determined. The results show that it has a CAI value of 0.1 and GC contents of 58.97% which established the adequate expression and downstream processing of the vaccine construct, and our research demonstrated that the multi-epitope subunit vaccine exhibits antigenic characteristics. Additionally, we carried out an in silico immunological simulation to examine the immune reaction to an injection. Our results strongly suggest that the vaccine candidate on further validation would induce immune response against the V. cholerae infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00937711
Volume :
75
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Immunogenetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162682776
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00251-022-01282-5