Immunoinformatics approaches to explore Helicobacter Pylori proteome (Virulence Factors) to design B and T cell multi-epitope subunit vaccine.

dc.contributor.author

Khan, Mazhar

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Khan, Shahzeb

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Ali, Asim

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Akbar, Hameed

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Sayaf, Abrar Mohammad

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Khan, Abbas

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Wei, Dong-Qing

dc.date.accessioned

2023-04-27T00:55:21Z

dc.date.available

2023-04-27T00:55:21Z

dc.date.issued

2019-09

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2023-04-27T00:55:05Z

dc.description.abstract

Helicobacter Pylori is a known causal agent of gastric malignancies and peptic ulcers. The extremophile nature of this bacterium is protecting it from designing a potent drug against it. Therefore, the use of computational approaches to design antigenic, stable and safe vaccine against this pathogen could help to control the infections associated with it. Therefore, in this study, we used multiple immunoinformatics approaches along with other computational approaches to design a multi-epitopes subunit vaccine against H. Pylori. A total of 7 CTL and 12 HTL antigenic epitopes based on c-terminal cleavage and MHC binding scores were predicted from the four selected proteins (CagA, OipA, GroEL and cagA). The predicted epitopes were joined by AYY and GPGPG linkers. Β-defensins adjuvant was added to the N-terminus of the vaccine. For validation, immunogenicity, allergenicity and physiochemical analysis were conducted. The designed vaccine is likely antigenic in nature and produced robust and substantial interactions with Toll-like receptors (TLR-2, 4, 5, and 9). The vaccine developed was also subjected to an in silico cloning and immune response prediction model, which verified its efficiency of expression and the immune system provoking response. These analyses indicate that the suggested vaccine may produce particular immune responses against H. pylori, but laboratory validation is needed to verify the safety and immunogenicity status of the suggested vaccine design.

dc.identifier

10.1038/s41598-019-49354-z

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2045-2322

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2045-2322

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27143

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

dc.relation.ispartof

Scientific reports

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10.1038/s41598-019-49354-z

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Humans

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Helicobacter pylori

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Proteome

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Virulence Factors

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Vaccines

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Bacterial Vaccines

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Vaccines, Subunit

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Epitopes, B-Lymphocyte

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Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte

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Computational Biology

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Amino Acid Sequence

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Drug Design

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Models, Molecular

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Computer Simulation

dc.title

Immunoinformatics approaches to explore Helicobacter Pylori proteome (Virulence Factors) to design B and T cell multi-epitope subunit vaccine.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Akbar, Hameed|0000-0003-3423-860X

pubs.begin-page

13321

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1

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Staff

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Basic Science Departments

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Pharmacology & Cancer Biology

pubs.publication-status

Published

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9

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