基于结构的反向疫苗学没有成功地开发出有效的HIV-1疫苗,因为病毒表位与抗体的结合没有在表位上诱导保护性免疫原性

M. H. Regenmortel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

免疫原和免疫原性等术语可能表明,表位能够产生免疫反应,尽管它们只在宿主体内触发与b细胞受体的一系列反应,最终导致免疫系统(IS)产生各种保护性抗体。许多HIV疫苗研究集中于阐明存在于病毒粒子糖蛋白尖刺上的HIV表位的结构,因为这些表位是潜在的疫苗免疫原,可以诱导抗病毒感染的保护性抗体。这种被称为基于结构的反向疫苗学(SBRV)的方法分析了与抗体结合的HIV表位的3D结构,因为研究人员知道,如果表位确实与抗体强烈结合,那么当用作疫苗时,它也能够诱导中和抗体[1]。在细菌学中,反向疫苗学(Reverse Vaccinology, RV)是指预测细菌能够表达的所有潜在疫苗免疫原的策略,可以进行经验检验。在病毒学中,逆向工程方法并不成功[2],因为病毒抗原能更好地识别单克隆抗体,但没有获得激发保护性抗体的免疫原性能力[3]。疫苗学家无法通过合理的设计开发HIV-1疫苗,因为他们的尝试是基于许多错误的假设和免疫原性和抗原性之间的混淆,因为与中和抗体结合的抗原表位不一定能够诱导保护性免疫反应[1]。确实,经验验证潜在的候选疫苗是否具有足够的保护性免疫原性[4]是非常必要的,因为仅基于抗原性的合理疫苗设计将无法揭示哪些免疫原能够导致保护性免疫反应[5]。hiv感染个体的自然免疫反应也不能清除感染,这表明疫苗必须达到IS在遇到病毒时无法做到的一些效果。另一个障碍是艾滋病毒可以整合到宿主基因组中,从而使病毒无法被免疫识别,同时病毒还表现出明显的抗原变异性,逐渐破坏is。表位-旁位复合物的抗原结构与自由分子的结合位点结构在相互适应和诱导配合改变之前总是有很大的不同;然而,为了获得保护性免疫原性,病毒抗体的结合位点必须事先在与互补表位相互作用过程中发生改变,从而使副抗原具有诱导保护性免疫原性,这对疫苗效力至关重要[6]。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Structure-Based Reverse Vaccinology Did not Succeed in Developing an Effective Vaccine Against HIV-1 Because the Binding of Viral Epitopes with Antibodies Did Not Induce a Protective Immunogenicity in the Epitopes
Terms like immunogen and immunogenicity may suggest that epitopes are able to generate immune responses, although they only trigger in the host a series of reactions with B-cell receptors that eventually leads the Immune System (IS) to produce a variety of protective antibodies. Much of HIV vaccine research concentrates on elucidating the structure of the HIV epitopes present on the glycoprotein spikes of the virion because these epitopes are potential vaccine immunogens that can induce protective antibodies against viral infection. The approach known as Structure-Based Reverse Vaccinology (SBRV) analyses the 3D structure of HIV epitopes bound to antibodies since investigators know that if the epitope did bind strongly to an antibody, it would also be able to induce neutralising antibodies when used as a vaccine [1]. In bacteriology, Reverse Vaccinology (RV) refers to the strategy of predicting all the potential vaccine immunogens that a bacterium is able to express, which can be tested empirically. In virology, the reverse engineering approach was unsuccessful [2] because the viral antigens, which recognized monoclonal antibodies better, did not acquire the immunogenic ability of eliciting protective antibodies [3]. Vaccinologists were unable to develop an HIV-1 vaccine by rational design because their attempts were based on a number of erroneous assumptions and a confusion between immunogenicity and antigenicity, since an antigenic epitope that binds with a neutralising antibody is not necessarily able to induce a protective immune response [1]. It is indeed always imperative to verify empirically that a potential vaccine candidate possesses an adequate protective immunogenicity [4] since rational vaccine design based only on antigenicity will not reveal which immunogens would be able to lead to a protective immune response [5]. The natural immune response in HIV1 infected individuals also does not clear the infection, which indicates that a vaccine must achieve something that the IS is not able to do when it encounters the virus. An additional impediment is that HIV can integrate into the host genome which then conceals the virus from immune recognition while the virus also exhibits a pronounced antigenic variability that progressively destroys the IS. The antigenic structures visualised in epitope-paratope complexes are always very different from the structures of the binding sites in the free molecules before they have been altered by mutual adaptation and induced fit; however, for achieving protective immunogenicity the binding sites of viral antibodies must previously have been altered during their interaction with complementary epitopes which endows the paratopes with an induced protective immunogenicity that is essential for vaccinal efficacy [6].
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