Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design

Allergy is becoming an intensifying disease among the world population, particularly in the developed world. Once allergy develops, sufferers are permanently trapped in a hyper-immune response that makes them sensitive to innocuous substances. The immune pathway concerned with developing allergy is...

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Main Author: Sari S. Sabban
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2001037021003433
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spelling doaj-314c634b405245f8a267acdd2ff7158c2021-08-28T04:43:15ZengElsevierComputational and Structural Biotechnology Journal2001-03702021-01-011947384750Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine designSari S. Sabban0King Abdulaziz University, Faculty of Science, Department of Biological Sciences, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Corresponding author.Allergy is becoming an intensifying disease among the world population, particularly in the developed world. Once allergy develops, sufferers are permanently trapped in a hyper-immune response that makes them sensitive to innocuous substances. The immune pathway concerned with developing allergy is the Th2 immune pathway where the IgE antibody binds to its Fc∊RI receptor on Mast and Basophil cells. This paper discusses a protocol that could disrupt the binding between the antibody and its receptor for a potential permanent treatment. Ten proteins were computationally designed to display a human IgE motif very close in proximity to the IgE antibody’s Fc∊RI receptor’s binding site in an effort for these proteins to be used as a vaccine against our own IgE antibody. The motif of interest was the FG loop motif and it was excised and grafted onto a Staphylococcus aureus protein (PDB ID 1YN3), then the motif + scaffold structure had its sequence re-designed around the motif to find an amino acid sequence that would fold to the designed structure correctly. These ten computationally designed proteins showed successful folding when simulated using Rosetta’s AbinitioRelax folding simulation and the IgE epitope was clearly displayed in its native three-dimensional structure in all of them. These designed proteins have the potential to be used as a pan anti-allergy vaccine. This work employedin silicobased methods for designing the proteins and did not include any experimental verifications.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2001037021003433Protein designEpitope graftingVaccine designComputational structural biologyAllergyType I hypersensitivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sari S. Sabban
spellingShingle Sari S. Sabban
Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
Protein design
Epitope grafting
Vaccine design
Computational structural biology
Allergy
Type I hypersensitivity
author_facet Sari S. Sabban
author_sort Sari S. Sabban
title Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
title_short Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
title_full Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
title_fullStr Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
title_full_unstemmed Computationally grafting an IgE epitope onto a scaffold: Implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
title_sort computationally grafting an ige epitope onto a scaffold: implications for a pan anti-allergy vaccine design
publisher Elsevier
series Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
issn 2001-0370
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Allergy is becoming an intensifying disease among the world population, particularly in the developed world. Once allergy develops, sufferers are permanently trapped in a hyper-immune response that makes them sensitive to innocuous substances. The immune pathway concerned with developing allergy is the Th2 immune pathway where the IgE antibody binds to its Fc∊RI receptor on Mast and Basophil cells. This paper discusses a protocol that could disrupt the binding between the antibody and its receptor for a potential permanent treatment. Ten proteins were computationally designed to display a human IgE motif very close in proximity to the IgE antibody’s Fc∊RI receptor’s binding site in an effort for these proteins to be used as a vaccine against our own IgE antibody. The motif of interest was the FG loop motif and it was excised and grafted onto a Staphylococcus aureus protein (PDB ID 1YN3), then the motif + scaffold structure had its sequence re-designed around the motif to find an amino acid sequence that would fold to the designed structure correctly. These ten computationally designed proteins showed successful folding when simulated using Rosetta’s AbinitioRelax folding simulation and the IgE epitope was clearly displayed in its native three-dimensional structure in all of them. These designed proteins have the potential to be used as a pan anti-allergy vaccine. This work employedin silicobased methods for designing the proteins and did not include any experimental verifications.
topic Protein design
Epitope grafting
Vaccine design
Computational structural biology
Allergy
Type I hypersensitivity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2001037021003433
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