Iterative immunogen optimization to focus immune responses on a conserved, subdominant viral epitope

Journal: bioRxiv
Published Date:

Abstract

Designing effective vaccination strategies against genetically diverse viruses, such as HIV or influenza, is hindered by the ability of these pathogens to mutate and readily evade immune control. While these viruses contain conserved regions that cannot easily mutate without affecting viral fitness, these sites are subdominant, meaning that they are not the primary target of immune responses elicited by natural infection or current vaccines. Here, we integrated recent advances in machine learning methods for protein structure prediction and design to engineer protein immunogens that focus immune responses on a conserved, subdominant HA epitope targeted by broadly cross-reactive influenza antibodies. Iterating between computation-guided optimization and in vivo analyses generated immunogens that faithfully displayed the target epitope and redirected humoral responses toward it upon vaccination. These results provide a blueprint for applying recent protein engineering approaches to immunogen design and may inform the design of broadly protective influenza vaccines.

Authors

  • Daniel J. Marston; Akiko Watanabe; A. Brenda Kapingidza; Caitlin Harris; Elizabeth Van Itallie; Kapil Devkota; Jayani Christopher; Peiying Liu; Beena Pun; Brianna Rhodes; McKenzie Frazier; Kaitlyn Winters; Heman Burre; Pranav Kannan; Xiaoe Liang; Garnett Kelsoe; Kevin Wiehe; Rohit Singh; Daniel Wrapp; Masayuki Kuraoka; Mihai L. Azoitei