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Exploring the cancer-testis antigen BORIS to design a novel multi-epitope vaccine against breast cancer based on immunoinformatics approaches

Elham Mahdevar, Ashkan Safavi, Ardavan Abiri, Amirhosein Kefayat, Seyed Hossein Hejazi, Seyed Mohsen Miresmaeili, Vahid Iranpur Mobarakeh

2021Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics69 citationsDOI

Abstract

Recently, cancer immunotherapy has gained lots of attention to replace the current chemoradiation approaches and multi-epitope cancer vaccines are manifesting as the next generation of cancer immunotherapy. Therefore, in this study, we used multiple immunoinformatics approaches along with other computational approaches to design a novel multi-epitope vaccine against breast cancer. The most immunogenic regions of the BORIS cancer-testis antigen were selected according to the binding affinity to MHC-I and II molecules as well as containing multiple cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitopes by multiple immunoinformatics servers. The selected regions were linked together by GPGPG linker. Also, a T helper epitope (PADRE) and the TLR-4/MD-2 agonist (L7/L12 ribosomal protein from mycobacterium) were incorporated by A(EAAAK)3A linker to form the final vaccine construct. Then, its physicochemical properties, cleavage sites, TAP transport efficiency, B cell epitopes, IFN-γ inducing epitopes and population coverage were predicted. The final vaccine construct was reverse translated, codon-optimized and inserted into pcDNA3.1 to form the DNA vaccine. The final vaccine construct was a stable, immunogenic and non-allergenic protein that contained numerous CTL epitopes, IFN-γ inducing epitopes and several linear and conformational B cell epitopes. Also, the final vaccine construct formed stable and significant interactions with TLR-4/MD-2 complex according to molecular docking and dynamics simulations. Moreover, its world population coverage for HLA-I and HLA-II were about 93% and 96%, respectively. Taking together, these preliminary results can be used as an appropriate platform for further experimental investigations. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.

Topics & Concepts

EpitopeCancer immunotherapyCTL*DNA vaccinationBiologyAntigenImmunotherapyPopulationVirologyCancer vaccineCytotoxic T cellComputational biologyImmunologyImmune systemMedicineGeneticsCD8ImmunizationIn vitroEnvironmental healthvaccines and immunoinformatics approachesImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research
Exploring the cancer-testis antigen BORIS to design a novel multi-epitope vaccine against breast cancer based on immunoinformatics approaches | Litcius