Hepatitis C Virus E1E2 Structure, Diversity, and Implications for Vaccine Development

被引:3
|
作者
Pierce, Brian G. [1 ,2 ]
Felbinger, Nathaniel [1 ,2 ]
Metcalf, Matthew [1 ,2 ]
Toth, Eric A. [1 ]
Ofek, Gilad [1 ,2 ]
Fuerst, Thomas R. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Inst Biosci & Biotechnol Res, Rockville, MD 20850 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Cell Biol & Mol Genet, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
来源
VIRUSES-BASEL | 2024年 / 16卷 / 05期
关键词
structure; nanoparticles; vaccine; HUMAN MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES; BROADLY NEUTRALIZING ANTIBODIES; ASSEMBLING PROTEIN NANOPARTICLES; E2 ENVELOPE GLYCOPROTEIN; IMMUNE-RESPONSES; HIV-1; VACCINE; DRUG-USERS; INFECTION; CLEARANCE; EPITOPES;
D O I
10.3390/v16050803
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major medical health burden and the leading cause of chronic liver disease and cancer worldwide. More than 58 million people are chronically infected with HCV, with 1.5 million new infections occurring each year. An effective HCV vaccine is a major public health and medical need as recognized by the World Health Organization. However, due to the high variability of the virus and its ability to escape the immune response, HCV rapidly accumulates mutations, making vaccine development a formidable challenge. An effective vaccine must elicit broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) in a consistent fashion. After decades of studies from basic research through clinical development, the antigen of choice is considered the E1E2 envelope glycoprotein due to conserved, broadly neutralizing antigenic domains located in the constituent subunits of E1, E2, and the E1E2 heterodimeric complex itself. The challenge has been elicitation of robust humoral and cellular responses leading to broad virus neutralization due to the relatively low immunogenicity of this antigen. In view of this challenge, structure-based vaccine design approaches to stabilize key antigenic domains have been hampered due to the lack of E1E2 atomic-level resolution structures to guide them. Another challenge has been the development of a delivery platform in which a multivalent form of the antigen can be presented in order to elicit a more robust anti-HCV immune response. Recent nanoparticle vaccines are gaining prominence in the field due to their ability to facilitate a controlled multivalent presentation and trafficking to lymph nodes, where they can interact with both the cellular and humoral components of the immune system. This review focuses on recent advances in understanding the E1E2 heterodimeric structure to facilitate a rational design approach and the potential for development of a multivalent nanoparticle-based HCV E1E2 vaccine. Both aspects are considered important in the development of an effective HCV vaccine that can effectively address viral diversity and escape.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] An Antigenically Diverse, Representative Panel of Envelope Glycoproteins for Hepatitis C Virus Vaccine Development
    Salas, Jordan H.
    Urbanowicz, Richard A.
    Guest, Johnathan D.
    Frumento, Nicole
    Figueroa, Alexis
    Clark, Kaitlyn E.
    Keck, Zhenyong
    Cowton, Vanessa M.
    Cole, Sarah J.
    Patel, Arvind H.
    Fuerst, Thomas R.
    Drummer, Heidi E.
    Major, Marian
    Tarr, Alexander W.
    Ball, Jonathan K.
    Law, Mansun
    Pierce, Brian G.
    Foung, Steven K. H.
    Bailey, Justin R.
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2022, 162 (02) : 562 - 574
  • [22] Hepatitis E Virus Drug Development
    Kinast, Volker
    Burkard, Thomas L.
    Todt, Daniel
    Steinmann, Eike
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2019, 11 (06):
  • [23] Hepatitis C Virus E1 and E2 Proteins Used as Separate Immunogens Induce Neutralizing Antibodies with Additive Properties
    Beaumont, Elodie
    Roch, Emmanuelle
    Chopin, Lucie
    Roingeard, Philippe
    PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (03):
  • [24] Progress and Challenges to Hepatitis E Vaccine Development and Deployment
    Huang, Xingcheng
    Lu, Jiaoxi
    Liao, Mengjun
    Huang, Yue
    Wu, Ting
    Xia, Ningshao
    VACCINES, 2024, 12 (07)
  • [25] Hepatitis E virus: Current epidemiology and vaccine
    Wu, Xing
    Chen, Pan
    Lin, Huijuan
    Hao, Xiaotian
    Liang, Zhenglun
    HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS, 2016, 12 (10) : 2603 - 2610
  • [26] Optimized Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) E2 Glycoproteins and their Immunogenicity in Combination with MVA-HCV
    Marin, Maria Q.
    Sliepen, Kwinten
    Garcia-Arriaza, Juan
    Koekkoek, Sylvie M.
    Perez, Patricia
    Sorzano, Carlos Oscar S.
    Gomez, Carmen E.
    Sanders, Rogier W.
    Esteban, Mariano
    VACCINES, 2020, 8 (03) : 1 - 25
  • [27] Evaluation of novel synthetic peptides of avian hepatitis E virus ORF2 as vaccine candidate in chickens
    Chen, Yiyang
    Tang, Yujia
    Zhang, Shiyu
    Tian, Yinuo
    Xu, Shenhao
    Zhang, Chengwei
    Lin, Huanqing
    Zhao, Qin
    Zhou, En-Min
    Liu, Baoyuan
    VIRUS RESEARCH, 2024, 349
  • [28] Conserved peptides within the E2 region of Hepatitis C virus induce humoral and cellular responses in goats
    El-Awady, Mostafa K.
    Tabll, Ashraf A.
    El-Abd, Yasmine S.
    Yousif, Hassan
    Hegab, Mohsen
    Reda, Mohamed
    El Shenawy, Reem
    Moustafa, Rehab I.
    Degheidy, Nabila
    El Din, Noha G. Bader
    VIROLOGY JOURNAL, 2009, 6
  • [29] Structure-function analysis of hepatitis C virus envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2
    Nayak, Aparajita
    Pattabiraman, Nagarajan
    Fadra, Numrah
    Goldman, Radoslav
    Pond, Sergei L. Kosakovsky
    Mazumder, Raja
    JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS, 2015, 33 (08) : 1682 - 1694
  • [30] Hepatitis C virus E1 and modified E2 delivered from an mRNA vaccine induces protective immunity
    Patra, Tapas
    Meyer, Keith
    Haga, Yuki
    Reagan, Erin K. K.
    Weissman, Drew
    Ray, Ranjit
    NPJ VACCINES, 2023, 8 (01)