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Site-Specific Conjugation of Cell Wall Polyrhamnose to Protein SpyAD Envisioning a Safe Universal Group A Streptococcal Vaccine

Authors :
Nina J. Gao
Satoshi Uchiyama
Lucy Pill
Samira Dahesh
Joshua Olson
Leslie Bautista
Shilpa Maroju
Aym Berges
Janet Z. Liu
Raymond H. Zurich
Nina M. van Sorge
Jeff Fairman
Neeraj Kapoor
Victor Nizet
Stijn van der Veen
Source :
Infectious Microbes & Diseases, Vol 3, Iss 2, Pp 87-100 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Health, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract. Development of an effective vaccine against the leading human bacterial pathogen group A Streptococcus (GAS) is a public health priority. The species defining group A cell wall carbohydrate (GAC, Lancefield antigen) can be engineered to remove its immunodominant N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) side chain, implicated in provoking autoimmune cross-reactivity in rheumatic heart disease, leaving its polyrhamnose core (GACPR). Here we generate a novel protein conjugate of the GACPR and test the utility of this conjugate antigen in active immunization. Instead of conjugation to a standard carrier protein, we selected SpyAD, a highly conserved GAS surface protein containing both B-cell and T-cell epitopes relevant to the bacterium that itself shows promise as a vaccine antigen. SpyAD was synthesized using the XpressTM cell-free protein expression system, incorporating a non-natural amino acid to which GACPR was conjugated by site-specific click chemistry to yield high molecular mass SpyAD-GACPR conjugates and avoid disruption of important T-cell and B-cell immunological epitopes. The conjugated SpyAD-GACPR elicited antibodies that bound the surface of multiple GAS strains of diverse M types and promoted opsonophagocytic killing by human neutrophils. Active immunization of mice with a multivalent vaccine consisting of SpyAD-GACPR, together with candidate vaccine antigens streptolysin O and C5a peptidase, protected against GAS challenge in a systemic infection model and localized skin infection model, without evidence of cross reactivity to human heart or brain tissue epitopes. This general approach may allow GAC to be safely and effectively included in future GAS subunit vaccine formulations with the goal of broad protection without autoreactivity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26415917 and 00000000
Volume :
3
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Infectious Microbes & Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.58286676400c4e648b12e0fb6fee2de0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/IM9.0000000000000044