A platform for glycoengineering a polyvalent pneumococcal bioconjugate vaccine using E. coli as a host

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作者
Christian M. Harding
Mohamed A. Nasr
Nichollas E. Scott
Guillaume Goyette-Desjardins
Harald Nothaft
Anne E. Mayer
Sthefany M. Chavez
Jeremy P. Huynh
Rachel L. Kinsella
Christine M. Szymanski
Christina L. Stallings
Mariela Segura
Mario F. Feldman
机构
[1] VaxNewMo LLC,Department of Biological Sciences
[2] University of Alberta,Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Institute for Infection and Immunity
[3] University of Melbourne at the Peter Doherty,Swine and Poultry Infectious Diseases Research Center, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
[4] University of Montreal,Department of Molecular Microbiology
[5] Washington University School of Medicine,Department of Microbiology and Complex Carbohydrate Research Center
[6] University of Georgia,Department of Biology, Centre for Applied Synthetic Biology
[7] Concordia University,undefined
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Nature Communications | / 10卷
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摘要
Chemical synthesis of conjugate vaccines, consisting of a polysaccharide linked to a protein, can be technically challenging, and in vivo bacterial conjugations (bioconjugations) have emerged as manufacturing alternatives. Bioconjugation relies upon an oligosaccharyltransferase to attach polysaccharides to proteins, but currently employed enzymes are not suitable for the generation of conjugate vaccines when the polysaccharides contain glucose at the reducing end, which is the case for ~75% of Streptococcus pneumoniae capsules. Here, we use an O-linking oligosaccharyltransferase to generate a polyvalent pneumococcal bioconjugate vaccine with polysaccharides containing glucose at their reducing end. In addition, we show that different vaccine carrier proteins can be glycosylated using this system. Pneumococcal bioconjugates are immunogenic, protective and rapidly produced within E. coli using recombinant techniques. These proof-of-principle experiments establish a platform to overcome limitations of other conjugating enzymes enabling the development of bioconjugate vaccines for many important human and animal pathogens.
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