Team:Slovenia
From 2008.igem.org
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<strong>Scientific abstract</strong><br /> | <strong>Scientific abstract</strong><br /> | ||
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- | Almost half of the world's population is infected with bacteria Helicobacter pylori, which colonizes gastric mucosa, causing gastritis and ulcers and is recognized as a type I carcinogen by WHO. Effective vaccine against H. pylori is not available, although it would be a durable solution, particularly in a formulation affordable to the third world population. H. pylori evades the immune surveillance by modifying several of its components including flagellin to avoid detection by several Toll-like receptors. | + | <div style="text-align:justify;">Almost half of the world's population is infected with bacteria Helicobacter pylori, which colonizes gastric mucosa, causing gastritis and ulcers and is recognized as a type I carcinogen by WHO. Effective vaccine against H. pylori is not available, although it would be a durable solution, particularly in a formulation affordable to the third world population. H. pylori evades the immune surveillance by modifying several of its components including flagellin to avoid detection by several Toll-like receptors. |
The goal of our project was to prepare a modular designer vaccine, using the principles of synthetic immunology. Effective vaccine has to trigger activation of adaptive immunity, which is directed against microbial proteins or polysaccharides as well as of innate immunity, which is usually achieved by the addition of adjuvants of whole microbes. We prepared a set of “immunobricks” with defined functions in activation of immune system and can be combined to achieve a desired response. | The goal of our project was to prepare a modular designer vaccine, using the principles of synthetic immunology. Effective vaccine has to trigger activation of adaptive immunity, which is directed against microbial proteins or polysaccharides as well as of innate immunity, which is usually achieved by the addition of adjuvants of whole microbes. We prepared a set of “immunobricks” with defined functions in activation of immune system and can be combined to achieve a desired response. | ||
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In the first approach we have modified H. pylori flagellin to be able to activate TLR5, making it »visible« to the immune system. To this chimeric flagellin we attached either complete protein or a designed multiepitope of several virulence factors of H. pylori. We prepared three different implementations of this system in the form of recombinant proteins, engineered bacteria and DNA vaccine, demonstrated responsiveness of each of them in the cell culture assay, cellular localization and in even obtained significant antibody response in laboratory animals only weeks after vaccination. | In the first approach we have modified H. pylori flagellin to be able to activate TLR5, making it »visible« to the immune system. To this chimeric flagellin we attached either complete protein or a designed multiepitope of several virulence factors of H. pylori. We prepared three different implementations of this system in the form of recombinant proteins, engineered bacteria and DNA vaccine, demonstrated responsiveness of each of them in the cell culture assay, cellular localization and in even obtained significant antibody response in laboratory animals only weeks after vaccination. | ||
- | The second approach was to extend the range of activation of innate immune response to different Toll-like receptors by linking antigen to different TLR segments, which are constitutively activated by the addition of a dimerization domain. In this case we could direct localization of resulting fusion receptors to either cell membrane or cellular vesicles, which should assist in proper antigen processing and presentation. The power of this approach is that we can mimic synergistic activation of several TLRs by pathogenic microbes, while having the advantage of safety of a defined subunit vaccine. | + | The second approach was to extend the range of activation of innate immune response to different Toll-like receptors by linking antigen to different TLR segments, which are constitutively activated by the addition of a dimerization domain. In this case we could direct localization of resulting fusion receptors to either cell membrane or cellular vesicles, which should assist in proper antigen processing and presentation. The power of this approach is that we can mimic synergistic activation of several TLRs by pathogenic microbes, while having the advantage of safety of a defined subunit vaccine.</div> |
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Revision as of 22:57, 29 October 2008