4.6 Article

Evaluation of the Whole Proteome of Achromobacter xylosoxidans to Identify Vaccine Targets for mRNA and Peptides-Based Vaccine Designing Against the Emerging Respiratory and Lung Cancer-Causing Bacteria

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2021.825876

Keywords

Achromobacter xylosoxidans; lungs cancer; vaccine targets; mRNA-based vaccines; immune simulation

Funding

  1. Researchers Supporting Project of King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia [RSP-2021/198]

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This study screened the whole proteome of A. xylosoxidans and identified potential vaccine targets. Using a multi-epitope vaccine design approach, antigenic and non-allergenic constructs were designed. Docking with the immune receptor and molecular simulation confirmed the strong binding affinity and immune activity of these constructs. Further validations showed that the designed vaccine constructs could induce strong antibody responses in vivo, providing a basis for vaccine design against A. xylosoxidans.
Achromobacter xylosoxidans is a rod-shaped Gram-negative bacterium linked with causing several infections which mostly includes hematological malignancies. It has been recently reported to be associated with the development and progression of lung cancer and is an emerging respiratory disease-causing bacterium. The treatment of individuals infected with A. xylosoxidans bacteremia is difficult due to the fact that this pathogen has both intrinsic and acquired resistance mechanisms, typically resulting in a phenotype of multidrug resistance (MDR). Efforts are needed to design effective therapeutic strategies to curtail the emergence of this bacterium. Computational vaccine designing has proven its effectiveness, specificity, safety, and stability compared to conventional approaches of vaccine development. Therefore, the whole proteome of A. xylosoxidans was screened for the characterization of potential vaccine targets through subtractive proteomics pipeline for therapeutics design. Annotation of the whole proteome confirmed the three immunogenic vaccine targets, such as (E3HHR6), (E3HH04), and (E3HWA2), which were used to map the putative immune epitopes. The shortlisted epitopes, specific against Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes, Helper T-cell Lymphocytes, and linear B-Cell, were used to design the mRNA and multi-epitopes vaccine (MEVC). Initial validations confirmed the antigenic and non-allergenic properties of these constructs, followed by docking with the immune receptor, TLR-5, which resulted in robust interactions. The interaction pattern that followed in the docking complex included formation of 5 hydrogen bonds, 2 salt bridges, and 165 non-bonded contacts. This stronger binding affinity was also assessed through using the mmGBSA approach, showing a total of free binding energy of -34.64 kcal/mol. Further validations based on in silico cloning revealed a CAI score of 0.98 and an optimal percentage of GC contents (54.4%) indicated a putatively higher expression of the vaccine construct in Escherichia coli. Moreover, immune simulation revealed strong antibodies production upon the injection of the designed MEVC that resulted in the highest peaks of IgM+ IgG production (>3,500) between 10 and 15 days. In conclusion the current study provide basis for vaccine designing against the emerging A. xylosoxidans, which demands further experimental studies for in vitro and in vivo validations.

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