ABSTRACT.Trumenba (bivalent rLP2086) is a vaccine licensed for the prevention of meningococcal meningitis disease caused by Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B (NmB) in individuals 10-25 years of age in the USA. The vaccine is composed of two factor H binding protein (fHbp) variants that were recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli as native lipoproteins: rLP2086-A05 and rLP2086-B01. The vaccine was shown to induce potent bactericidal antibodies against a broad range of NmB isolates expressing fHbp that were different in sequence from the fHbp vaccine antigens. Here, we describe the characterization of the vaccine antigens including the elucidation of their structure which is characterized by two distinct motifs, the polypeptide domain and the N-terminal lipid moiety. In the vaccine formulation, the lipoproteins self-associate to form micelles driven by the hydrophobicity of the lipids and limited by the size of the folded polypeptides. The micelles help to increase the structural stability of the lipoproteins in the absence of bacterial cell walls. Analysis of the lipoproteins in Toll-like receptor (TLR) activation assays revealed their TLR2 agonist activity. This activity was lost with removal of the O-linked fatty acids, similar to removal of all lipids, demonstrating that this moiety plays an adjuvant role in immune activation. The thorough understanding of the structure and function of each moiety of the lipoproteins, as well as their relationship, lays the foundation for identifying critical parameters to guide vaccine development and manufacture.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an angiogenic growth factor which binds to two structurally related tyrosine kinase receptors denoted KDR and FLT1. To compare the interaction of VEGF with each receptor, cell lines which express individual receptor subtypes were identified using Northern blot hybridization. Bovine aortic endothelial (ABAE) cells and WM35 melanoma cells were found to express KDR, while FLT1 was primarily expressed on SK-MEL-37. Both receptor subtypes were detected on another melanoma cell line (WM9). Heparin augmented VEGF binding to KDR-expressing cells (ABAE and WM35), but inhibited VEGF binding to FLT1-expressing cells (SK-MEL-37 and WM9). The concentration of heparin required for half maximal stimulation of VEGF binding to KDR-expressing cells (500 ng/ml) was 25 times greater than that required for half maximal inhibition of binding to FLT1-expressing cells (20 ng/ml). In WM9 cells, the effect of heparin was bimodal; low concentration inhibited, while higher concentrations stimulated binding of 125I-VEGF. Placenta growth factor (PIGF-1) is a recently described growth factor structurally similar to VEGF. PIGF-1 had a negligible or no effect on 125I-VEGF binding to KDR-expressing cells (ABAE, WM35), but did complete for binding to FLT1-expressing cells (SK-MEL-37 and WM9). Addition of heparin had no effect on its ability to compete for binding with 125I-VEGF. The data indicate differential regulation of the two VEGF receptors by heparin and extended specificity of FLT1 receptor, but not KDR, for binding PIGF-1 growth factor.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of severe respiratory infection in children worldwide. Recombinant live attenuated viral preparations are one of the most promising strategies for vaccination but they typically possess poor thermostability. In this work, a library of compounds was screened and stabilizers were selected based on their ability to inhibit the aggregation of RSV perturbed at 56˚C. After screening and selection of excipients, the conformational stability of the RSV proteins was evaluated in the presence of potential stabilizers. The secondary and tertiary structures as well as aggregation/dissociation of RSV were monitored using circular dichroism and second derivative UV absorption spectroscopies and light scattering, respectively, as a function of temperature (10-90˚C). RSV membrane fluidity was also evaluated by generalized polarization of Laurdan fluorescence. Screening experiments showed that a variety of sugars, amino acids, polyols and polyanions inhibited the aggregation of viral particles. Conformational stability studies demonstrated that the addition of sugars and polyols stabilized RSV as indicated by a significant increase in the transition melting temperature (Tm) of both the secondary and tertiary structures as well as the gel to liquid crystalline membrane transition. These results should provide the basis for rational development of more physically stable formulations of live attenuated RSV vaccines.
A nonreplicating rotavirus vaccine (NRRV) containing 3 recombinant fusion proteins adsorbed to aluminum adjuvant (Alhydrogel [AH]) is currently in clinical trials. The compatibility and stability of monovalent NRRV antigen with key components of a multidose vaccine formulation were examined using physicochemical and immunochemical methods. The extent and strength of antigen-adjuvant binding were diminished by increasing phosphate concentration, and acceptable levels were identified along with alternate buffering agents. Addition of the preservative thimerosal destabilized AH-adsorbed P2-VP8-P[8] as measured by differential scanning calorimetry. Over 3 months at 4 C, AH-adsorbed P2-VP8-P[8] was stable, whereas at 25 C and 37 C, instability was observed which was greatly accelerated by thimerosal addition. Loss of antibody binding (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) correlated with loss of structural integrity (differential scanning calorimetry, fluorescence spectroscopy) with concomitant nonnative disulfide bond formation (sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) and Asn deamidation (liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry peptide mapping). An alternative preservative (2phenoxyethanol) showed similar antigen destabilization. Due to limited availability, only key assays were performed with monovalent P2-VP8-P[4] and P2-VP8-P[6] AH-adsorbed antigens, and varying levels of preservative incompatibility were observed. In summary, monovalent AH-adsorbed NRRV antigens stored at 4 C showed good stability without preservatives; however, future formulation development efforts are required to prepare a stable, preservative-containing, multidose NRRV formulation.
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