HeleneAndersenMayaBondeAndersenSimonCarlsen MortenAhlgreenGronemann&MadsChristianHjortsø Figure 4, Alignment of the NS3 protein: Alignment of NS3 performed.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Hepatitis B virus CDC website:
Advertisements

HIV and its lifecycle Sources: Wikipedia, HIV is a retrovirus (enveloped viruses possessing an RNA genome,
Bioinformatical design of a vaccine against influenza virus N1 subtype Bonaccorsi, Irene; Clausen, Martin Bau; Høj, Leif Howalt; Kjær, Jesper and Sayyad,
HLA: matching and donor selection
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL SEQUENCE ANALYSISTECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF DENMARK DTU T cell Epitope predictions using bioinformatics (Neural Networks and hidden.
Liver Disease and Thalassaemia George Constantinou.
MHC Polymorphism Ole Lund. Objectives What is HLA polymorphism? What is it good for? How does it make life difficult for vaccine design? Definition of.
MHC Polymorphism. MHC Class I pathway Figure by Eric A.J. Reits.
Vaccines and Antivirals. Clinical Use of Interferon Therefore they have been used in the treatment of cancers of various types. Therefore they have been.
Influenza A Virus Pandemic Prediction and Simulation Through the Modeling of Reassortment Matthew Ingham Integrated Sciences Program University of British.
1-month Practical Course Genome Analysis Lecture 3: Residue exchange matrices Centre for Integrative Bioinformatics VU (IBIVU) Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
Epitope Selection Rational Vaccine design. Why? Therapeutic vaccines Therapeutic vaccines Treatment of viral infections (e.g., HIV, HCV), and resistant.
Materials and Methods Abstract Conclusions Introduction 1. Korber B, et al. Br Med Bull 2001; 58: Rambaut A, et al. Nat. Rev. Genet. 2004; 5:
Combination of Drugs and Drug-Resistant Reverse Transcriptase Results in a Multiplicative Increase of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Mutant Frequencies.
Hepatitis Viruses Chapter 35. Properties of Hepatitis Viruses Six known Hepatitis type A virus (Picornaviridae) Hepatitis type B virus (Hepadnaviridae)
SPRINT-2/RESPOND-2 Boceprevir Plus Standard of Care Phase 3 Clinical Trials Analysis of Resistance Associated Variants by HCV Genotype 1 subtypes 1a and.
The Outcome of Acute Hepatitis C Predicted by the Evolution of the Viral Quasispecies Farci et al. (2000) Science 288, Georg Gerber HST.120 December.
Methods MHC class-I T cell epitope prediction for Nef Consensus and ancestral sequences of the Nef protein for the different HIV-1 subtypes were obtained.
T-cell Immunity to the Hepatitis C Virus During and After Pregnancy
The HCV vaccine: cooperation in the shadow of the pyramids Antonella Folgori.
Selection of T Cell Epitopes Using an Integrative Approach Mette Voldby Larsen cand. scient. in Biology PhD in Immunological Bioinformatics.
HIV-1 evolution in response to immune selection pressures
From Genomic Sequence Data to Genotype: A Proposed Machine Learning Approach for Genotyping Hepatitis C Virus Genaro Hernandez Jr CMSC 601 Spring 2011.
 Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects 170 million people worldwide  up to 80% of those infected become chronic infection.  HCV infection can cause chronic.
The Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) In all vertebrates there is a genetic region that has a major influence on graft survival This region is referred.
Using Comparative Genomics to Explore the Genetic Code of Influenza Sangeeta Venkatachalam.
DNA alphabet DNA is the principal constituent of the genome. It may be regarded as a complex set of instructions for creating an organism. Four different.
A Mutational Investigation of an HIV Patient’s GP120 Glycoprotein and it’s Implications on CD4 Binding Salita Kaistha Usrinus College, Collegeville PA.
Sequence Search and Analysis SPE 1653 (703)
REASSORTMENT OF INFLUENZA VIRUS
Introduction H5N1 is an avian influenza. It was detected in humans for the first time in 1997 in Hong Kong. Since then the spread to humans has been limited.
Inhibition of enterovirus 71 entry by peptides targeting I β-sheet of VP1 protein Ming-Liang He, Ph.D The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Computational methods for genomics-guided immunotherapy Sahar Al Seesi Computer Science & Engineering Department, UCONN Immunology Department, UCONN Health.
Susan L. Uprichard, PhD Director of Hepatology Research Loyola University Medical Center Department of Medicine Section of Hepatology HepNet 2013 HCV Virology.
Biochemistry of Hepatitis C
Immunology B cells and Antibodies – humoral
Specific Defenses of the Host Part 2 (acquired or adaptive immunity)
Bioinformatics in Vaccine Design
HCV Protease Yasir Waheed. Discovery of Hepatitis C.
Prediction of T cell epitopes using artificial neural networks Morten Nielsen, CBS, BioCentrum, DTU.
V3 Loop Binding to CCR5 and CXCR4 of Rapid and Non Progressor HIV Patients in Baltimore MD BackgroundCCR5 and CXCR4 Receptor Rapid-progressor Patient 10.
CATEGORY: VACCINES & THERAPEUTICS HIV-1 Vaccines Shokouh Makvandi-Nejad, University of Oxford, UK HIV-1 Vaccines © The copyright for this work resides.
Presentation of Master’s Thesis, 02/06/2015 Stoyan Velkov Determination of the worldwide HBV genotype distribution and the development of a representative.
Hepatitis Viruses.
HIV-1 Vaccines Shokouh Makvandi-Nejad, University of Oxford, UK
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages (April 2009)
IMMUNITY ..
Hepatitis C virus: life cycle in cells, infection and host response, and analysis of molecular markers influencing the outcome of infection and response.
Protein Families, Motifs & Domains.
1.
Structural biology of hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Protein–A Master Regulator?
Viruses Small but deadly!.
Hepatitis C virus infection
Hepatitis C virus: life cycle in cells, infection and host response, and analysis of molecular markers influencing the outcome of infection and response.
Relationship between Genotype and Phenotype
Immunologic evidence for lack of heterologous protection following resolution of HCV in patients with non–genotype 1 infection by Julian Schulze zur Wiesch,
Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Protein–A Master Regulator?
Telling self from non-self: Learning the language of the Immune System
Relationship between Genotype and Phenotype
LMU Department of Biology
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages (May 2018)
Hepatitis C virus: life cycle in cells, infection and host response, and analysis of molecular markers influencing the outcome of infection and response.
New therapies on the horizon for hepatitis C
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages (December 2001)
T cell receptor complex and diversity
Genomic Sequence Analysis of the Mouse Desmoglein Cluster Reveals Evidence for Six Distinct Genes: Characterization of Mouse DSG4, DSG5, and DSG6  Neil.
Simplified overview of the HCV life cycle and sites of direct acting antiviral therapies. Simplified overview of the HCV life cycle and sites of direct.
Peiyong Jiang, K.C. Allen Chan, Y.M. Dennis Lo
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages (December 2001)
Presentation transcript:

HeleneAndersenMayaBondeAndersenSimonCarlsen MortenAhlgreenGronemann&MadsChristianHjortsø Figure 4, Alignment of the NS3 protein: Alignment of NS3 performed using ClustalX. Five consensus sequences for HCV subtypes 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b and 3a are used [5]. Figure 3, Global distribution of different HCV genotypes [4]: The HCV subtypes 1a and 1b are the most commonly found HCV type, infecting 73,2 % of the total number of infected individuals. In Europe and North America these subtypes are the cause of about 80% of all HCV cases. Figure2, Model structure of HCV [3]: The HCV is a ssRNA virus. Its genome is protected by the Core protein and on the surface of the virus two envelope proteins E1 and E2 are found. These envelope proteins form a heterodimer (no structure available), which has shown to be necessary for viral entry into the host cell and hence an obvious target for antibody treatment. MHC Class I IDPeptide from proteinHLA supertypeStart positionSequence A2-0NS3A1411ATDALMTGY A2-1NS4BA2141ILAGYGAGV A2-2NS2A3, B62132KLGALTGTY A2-3E2B27203FRKHPEATY A2-4NS3B44346GEIPFYGKA A2-5NS4BB62137VLVDILAGY A2-6E2A24227DYPYRLWHY* A2-7E2 1aA2436SWHINSTAL A2-8E2 1bA2436SWHINRTAL MHC Class II A2-9NS4BDR4208MNRLIAFASRGNHVS A polytope was constructed consisting of nine peptides from four different proteins, as epitopes from NS3 alone was inadequate. The HLA range covered the supertypes A1, A2, A3, A24, B27, B44 and B62, which are represented by either one or two alleles in about 90 % of Caucasian population [8]. No suitable epitope could be chosen for B7 and B8. Besides, some of the less commonly occurring supertypes were not investigated, e.g. B58. Optimizing the polytope the program polytope_cont3 [12] was used. Table 1 shows from which protein the different epitopes in the polytope are derived. The polytope includes peptides from four of the ten HCV proteins, covering seven different MHC Class I supertypes and one MHC Class II supertype. All individual epitopes were BLAST’ed against the human genome and no significant matches were found [13]. Sequence for the polytope incl. linkers: mVLVDILAGYrrATDALMTGYhtwrDYPYRLWHYaayctGEI PFYGKAayyaFRKHPEATYtfyerrSWHINSTALkiMNRLIAF ASRGNHVSrtwSWHINRTALyrwKLGALTGTYqcykILAGY GAGVakakq capital letters: epitopes lower case letters: linkers italics: epitope that functions as a linker in this polytope *) functions as a linker in this case Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is a blood-borne virus and a major cause of chronic liver inflammation, liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma throughout the world. WHO estimates 180 million infected individuals worldwide and about 4 million newly infected each year [1]. The HCV is a RNA virus with a single stranded 9kb genome encoding a polyprotein of about 3000 amino acids cleaved to 10 functional polypeptides including three structural proteins. The core protein capsules the RNA genome, and envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2 are responsible for entry into host cell. Six HCV genotypes are found, but genotype 1 and its subtypes 1a and 1b are responsible for more than 70 % of all cases of HCV and are the major subtypes observed in the western world [2]. The purpose of this study is to identify possible molecular targets for vaccination in the subtypes 1a and 1b. [1] (June 21 st 2006), [2] Virology Apr 25;348(1):1-12. Epub 2006 Feb 7,[3] www-ermm.cbcu.cam.ac.uk (June 21 st 2006), [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]March et al: The HLA Facts book, [9] [10] [11] [12] Polytope_cont3 (Morten Nielsen), [13] Table 1: Schematic view of the origin of epitopes in the polytope. For each sequence in the polytope is given the protein from where it was selected, its start position and the HLA supertypes it binds to. ‘ID’ refers to the position in the polytope showed in figure 5; the epitope atlas. NetCTL also identified A2-0, A2-1 and A2-3 as possible epitopes for HLA supertype B62, A2-0 and A2-5 as possible epitope for HLA supertype A3 and also A2-5 as a possible epitope for HLA supertype A2. However these epitopes was not further examined. Figure5, Epitope atlas of the polytope: Atlas of the polytope showing MHC binding affinity, proteasomal cleavage and position of the different epitopes (see table 1). The affinity bar only show the affinity of the epitopes binding to the HLA supertype A2 Figure 1, Polyprotein of HCV [3]: The HCV polyprotein consists of 10 proteins. The core protein, E1, and E2 are structural proteins and the seven other proteins are non-structural. The poster is produced as part of the course Immunological Bioinformatics at CBS, DTU. A great thanks to our teachers: Ole Lund, Morten Nielsen and Claus Lundegaard The HCV Sequence Database [5] contains sequences for all HCV genotypes. Based on five consensus sequences aligned in ClustalX (figure 4), we found the non-structural protein NS3 to be the most conserved. NS3 exhibits three enzymatic activities: the N-terminal of NS3 predominantly functions as a serine protease and the C-terminal comprises the NTPase and RNA helicase functions. Of course, this protein is not possible to target with antibodies. This protein seemed the first choice for search of epitope candidates for MHC Class I presentation. However, SYFPEITHI [6] and NetCTL [7] analysis showed that to target a large amount of HLA supertypes, epitopes from this protein alone would be insufficient. In the analysis high affinity (>0.5) and C-terminal cleavage (>0.8) and a SYFPEITHI score >19 was considered. Therefore, conserved regions from other HCV proteins were submitted to the same searches in SYFPEITHI and NetCTL. The obvious choice for B-cell recognition would be the viral surface proteins E1 and E2. BepiPred [9] predicted several epitopes in both proteins, but CPHmodels [10] was not able to identify a total structure of the protein. The only motif identified was an E1 α-helix predicted by TMHMM [11] to be in a transmembrane (TM) region. Although a BepiPred predicted epitope was located outside of the TM region, the data supports no conclusions at present time. RNA viruses have relative high mutation rates and thus constructing the ideal vaccine which covers the entire world’s population a broad spectred polytope would be preferred. For simplicity reasons we aimed at the widely distributed HCV genotypes 1a and 1b and the HLA supertypes A2, A3 and B7 covering most of the people in the world. Unfortunately, no suitable epitope was found to cover the B7 and B8 supertypes. A polytope comprising more rare supertypes was constructed capable to cover roughly 70 % of Caucasian people. The polytope had to include epitopes from several different HCV proteins, since a spectrum broad enough to target all HLA supertypes was impossible to achieve from a single protein. The polytope included one MHC Class II directed epitope that might work in case the DNA fragment is not cleaved intracellular but by normal phagocytosis. The next step in HCV vaccine research would be epitope binding affinity measurements and then – in a few years time – clinical trials might be possible. We consider this an initial step in the direction of achieving a functional vaccine against HCV. Similar methods may be applied to other genotypes and subtypes.