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      Deciphering the structure–immunogenicity relationship of anti-Candida glycoconjugate vaccines

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          Abstract

          Elucidation of the molecular immunity of glycoconjugate vaccines has focused on the carbohydrate moiety, herein the effect of the corresponding conjugation sites is studied.

          Abstract

          The elucidation of the molecular details underlying the immune properties of glycoconjugate vaccines has largely focused on the carbohydrate moiety, while very little is known on the effect of the corresponding conjugation sites. Herein we constructed a set of β-(1 → 3) glucan oligosaccharide conjugates with a well-defined glycan structure, connected to patterns of predetermined tyrosine or lysine residues onto the CRM 197 carrier protein. To evaluate the effect of multivalent architecture in the glycan presentation, a novel linker enabling tyrosine-directed ligation of couples of oligosaccharides was prepared. The potential of these constructs as anti- Candida vaccines was evaluated in vivo, using as controls glycoconjugates prepared by a conventional random coupling strategy, and the structure–immune properties relationship was established. We found that: (i) the tyrosine-directed ligation resulted in higher anti-glycan IgG levels in comparison to the conjugation at predetermined lysine residues; (ii) the presentation of the carbohydrate antigen with a biantennary cluster of glycans onto specific tyrosine residues did not further increase the anti-glycan antibody level; (iii) the sera deriving from immunization with defined conjugates at tyrosine and, particularly at lysine residues, were proven stronger inhibitors of fungal adhesion to human epithelial cells in comparison to those from conjugates prepared by classic random chemistry; (iv) the presence of antibodies directed to the linkers did not affect the anti-glycan immune response. These findings suggest that a careful choice of the defined sites of conjugation and the loading density of antigens are important factors to raise high-quality anti-carbohydrate antibodies.

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          Most cited references34

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          Multivalent glycoconjugates as anti-pathogenic agents.

          Multivalency plays a major role in biological processes and particularly in the relationship between pathogenic microorganisms and their host that involves protein-glycan recognition. These interactions occur during the first steps of infection, for specific recognition between host and bacteria, but also at different stages of the immune response. The search for high-affinity ligands for studying such interactions involves the combination of carbohydrate head groups with different scaffolds and linkers generating multivalent glycocompounds with controlled spatial and topology parameters. By interfering with pathogen adhesion, such glycocompounds including glycopolymers, glycoclusters, glycodendrimers and glyconanoparticles have the potential to improve or replace antibiotic treatments that are now subverted by resistance. Multivalent glycoconjugates have also been used for stimulating the innate and adaptive immune systems, for example with carbohydrate-based vaccines. Bacteria present on their surfaces natural multivalent glycoconjugates such as lipopolysaccharides and S-layers that can also be exploited or targeted in anti-infectious strategies.
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            On the nature of the multivalency effect: a thermodynamic model.

            A quantitative model is proposed for the analysis of the thermodynamic parameters of multivalent interactions in dilute solutions or with immobilized multimeric receptor. The model takes into account all bound species and describes multivalent binding via two microscopic binding energies corresponding to inter- and intramolecular interactions (Delta G(o)inter and Delta G(o)intra), the relative contributions of which depend on the distribution of complexes with different numbers of occupied binding sites. The third component of the overall free energy, which we call the "avidity entropy" term, is a function of the degeneracy of bound states, Omega(i), which is calculated on the basis of the topology of interaction and the distribution of all bound species. This term grows rapidly with the number of receptor sites and ligand multivalency, it always favors binding, and explains why multivalency can overcome the loss of conformational entropy when ligands displayed at the ends of long tethers are bound. The microscopic parameters and may be determined from the observed binding energies for a set of oligovalent ligands by nonlinear fitting with the theoretical model. Here binding data obtained from two series of oligovalent carbohydrate inhibitors for Shiga-like toxins were used to verify the theory. The decavalent and octavalent inhibitors exhibit subnanomolar activity and are the most active soluble inhibitors yet seen that block Shiga-like toxin binding to its native receptor. The theory developed here in conjunction with our protocol for the optimization of tether length provides a predictive approach to design and maximize the avidity of multivalent ligands.
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              A novel mechanism for glycoconjugate vaccine activation of the adaptive immune system

              Although glycoconjugate vaccines have provided enormous health benefits globally, they have been less successful in significant high-risk populations. Exploring novel approaches to the enhancement of glycoconjugate effectiveness, we investigated molecular and cellular mechanisms governing the immune response to a prototypical glycoconjugate vaccine. In antigen-presenting cells, a carbohydrate epitope is generated upon endolysosomal processing of group B streptococcal type III polysaccharide coupled to a carrier protein. In conjunction with a carrier protein-derived peptide, this carbohydrate epitope binds to major histocompatibility class II (MHCII) and stimulates carbohydrate-specific CD4+ T-cell clones to produce interleukins 2 and 4—cytokines essential for providing T-cell help to antibody-producing B cells. An archetypical glycoconjugate vaccine constructed to maximize the presentation of carbohydrate epitopes recognized by T cells is 50–100 times more potent and significantly more protective in an animal model of infection than is a currently used vaccine construct.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CSHCBM
                Chem. Sci.
                Chem. Sci.
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2041-6520
                2041-6539
                2014
                2014
                : 5
                : 11
                : 4302-4311
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Novartis Vaccines
                [2 ]53100 Siena, Italy
                [3 ]Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research
                [4 ]Cambridge, USA
                [5 ]Department of Infectious, Parasitic and Immune-mediated Diseases
                [6 ]Istituto Superiore di Sanità
                [7 ]00161 Rome, Italy
                Article
                10.1039/C4SC01361A
                ba2547bf-0764-4b10-bff8-548a0d95b84b
                © 2014
                History

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