4.7 Article

Experimental and Computational Observations of Immunogenic Cobalt Porphyrin Lipid Bilayers: Nanodomain-Enhanced Antigen Association

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13010098

Keywords

molecular dynamics; simulations; bilayers; antigens; particles; vaccines; malaria

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R21AI22964, R01CA247771, R01AI148557, R01EB017270]
  2. National Science Foundation [1555220]
  3. Intramural Research Program of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease
  4. Global Health Innovative Technology Fund
  5. PATH's Malaria Vaccine Initiative
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  7. NSERC Canada Research Chairs Program
  8. Western University Postdoctoral Fellowship

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CoPoP facilitates non-covalent surface-display of antigens on liposomes, enhancing vaccine efficacy. Compared to aquocobalamin or cobalt nitrilotriacetic acid (Co-NTA) liposomes, Pfs25 binds more strongly to CoPoP liposomes, enhancing antigen internalization by macrophages. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that CoPoP-containing bilayers create nanodomains allowing for efficient stabilization of antigens.
Cobalt porphyrin phospholipid (CoPoP) can incorporate within bilayers to enable non-covalent surface-display of antigens on liposomes by mixing with proteins bearing a polyhistidine tag (his-tag); however, the mechanisms for how this occurs are poorly understood. These were investigated using the his-tagged model antigen Pfs25, a protein antigen candidate for malaria transmission-blocking vaccines. Pfs25 was found to associate with the small molecule aquocobalamin, a form of vitamin B12 and a cobalt-containing corrin macrocycle, but without particle formation, enabling comparative assessment. Relative to CoPoP liposomes, binding and serum stability studies indicated a weaker association of Pfs25 to aquocobalamin or cobalt nitrilotriacetic acid (Co-NTA) liposomes, which have cobalt displayed in the aqueous phase on lipid headgroups. Antigen internalization by macrophages was enhanced with Pfs25 bound to CoPoP liposomes. Immunization in mice with Pfs25 bound to CoPoP liposomes elicited antibodies that recognized ookinetes and showed transmission-reducing activity. To explore the physical mechanisms involved, we employed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of bilayers containing phospholipid, cholesterol, as well as either CoPoP or NTA-functionalized lipids. The results show that the CoPoP-containing bilayer creates nanodomains that allow access for a limited but sufficient amount of water molecules that could be replaced by his-tags due to their favorable free energy properties allowing for stabilization. The position of the metal center within the NTA liposomes was much more exposed to the aqueous environment, which could explain its limited capacity for stabilizing Pfs25. This study illustrates the impact of CoPoP-induced antigen particleization in enhancing vaccine efficacy, and provides molecular insights into the CoPoP bilayer properties that enable this.

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