WO2007024941A2 - Polyvalent vaccine - Google Patents
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- WO2007024941A2 WO2007024941A2 PCT/US2006/032907 US2006032907W WO2007024941A2 WO 2007024941 A2 WO2007024941 A2 WO 2007024941A2 US 2006032907 W US2006032907 W US 2006032907W WO 2007024941 A2 WO2007024941 A2 WO 2007024941A2
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Classifications
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
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- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K39/00—Medicinal preparations containing antigens or antibodies
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
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- A61P31/00—Antiinfectives, i.e. antibiotics, antiseptics, chemotherapeutics
- A61P31/12—Antivirals
- A61P31/14—Antivirals for RNA viruses
- A61P31/18—Antivirals for RNA viruses for HIV
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- C12N2740/00—Reverse transcribing RNA viruses
- C12N2740/00011—Details
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Definitions
- the present invention relates, in general, to an immunogenic composition (e.g., a vaccine) and, in particular, to a polyvalent immunogenic composition, such as a polyvalent HIV vaccine, and to methods of using same.
- an immunogenic composition e.g., a vaccine
- a polyvalent immunogenic composition such as a polyvalent HIV vaccine
- the invention further relates to methods that use a genetic algorithm to create sets of polyvalent antigens suitable for use, for example, in vaccination strategies.
- the vaccine preferably elicits an immune response capable of either preventing infection or, minimally, controlling viral replication if infection occurs, despite the failure of immune responses to natural infection to eliminate the virus (Nabel, Vaccine 20:1945-1947 (2002)) or to protect from superinfection (Altfeld et al, Nature 420:434-439 (2002)). Potent vaccines are needed, with optimized vectors, immunization protocols, and adjuvants (Nabel, Vaccine 20:1945-1947 (2002)), combined with antigens that can stimulate cross- reactive responses against the diverse spectrum of circulating viruses (Gaschen et al, Science 296:2354-2360 (2002), Korber et al, Br. Med.
- co-circulating individual HTV-I strains can differ from one another by 20% or more in relatively conserved proteins, and up to 35% in the Envelope protein (Gaschen et al, Science 296:2354-2360 (2002), Korber et al, Br. Med. Bull. 58:19-42 (2001)).
- CTL Cytotoxic T-lymphocytes
- HLA human leukocyte antigen
- Env protein is the primary target for neutralizing antibodies against HIV; since immune protection will likely require both B- cell and T-cell responses (Moore and Burton, Nat. Med. 10:769-71 (2004)), Env vaccine antigens will also need to be optimized separately to elicit antibody responses.
- T-cell-directed vaccine components in contrast, can target the more conserved proteins, but even the most conserved HIV-I proteins are diverse enough that variation is an issue.
- Artificial central-sequence vaccine approaches e.g., consensus sequences, in which every amino acid is found in a plurality of sequences, or maximum likelihood reconstructions of ancestral sequences (Gaschen et al, Science 296:2354-60 (2002), Gao et al, J. Virol.
- Single amino acid changes can allow an epitope to escape T-cell surveillance; since many T-cell epitopes differ between HIV-I strains at one or more positions, potential responses to any single vaccine antigen are limited. Whether a particular mutation results in escape depends upon the specific epitope/T-cell combination, although some changes broadly affect between-subtype cross-reactivity (Norris et al, AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses 20:315-25 (2004)). Including multiple variants in a polyvalent vaccine could enable responses to a broader range of circulating variants, and could also prime the immune system against common escape mutants (Jones et al, J. Exp. Med. 200:1243-56 (2004)).
- Escape from one T-cell receptor may create a variant that is susceptible to another (Allen et al, J. Virol. 79:12952-60 (2005), Feeney et al, J. Immunol. 174:7524-30 (2005)), so stimulating polyclonal responses to epitope variants may be beneficial (Killian et al, Aids 19:887-96 (2005)). Escape mutations that inhibit processing (Milicic et al, J. Immunol. 175:4618-26 (2005)) or HLA binding (Ammaranond et al, ADDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses 21:395-7 (2005)) cannot be directly countered by a T-cell with a different specificity, but responses to overlapping epitopes may block even some of these escape routes.
- the present invention relates to a polyvalent vaccine comprising several "mosaic" proteins (or genes encoding these proteins).
- the candidate vaccine antigens can be cocktails of k composite proteins (k being the number of sequence variants in the cocktail), optimized to include the maximum number of potential T-cell epitopes in an input set of viral proteins.
- the mosaics are generated from natural sequences: they resemble natural proteins and include the most common forms of potential epitopes. Since CD8+ epitopes are contiguous and typically nine amino-acids long, sets of mosaics can be scored by "coverage" of nonamers (9-mers) in the natural sequences (fragments of similar lengths are also well represented). 9-Mers not found at least three times can be excluded.
- This strategy provides the level of diversity coverage achieved by a massively polyvalent multiple-peptide vaccine but with important advantages: it allows vaccine delivery as intact proteins or genes, excludes low-frequency or unnatural epitopes that are not relevant to circulating strains, and its intact protein antigens are more likely to be processed as in a natural infection.
- the present invention relates to an immunogenic composition. More specifically, the invention relates to a polyvalent immunogenic composition (e.g., an HIV vaccine), and to methods of using same. The invention further relates to methods that involve the use of a genetic algorithm to design sets of polyvalent antigens suitable for use as vaccines.
- a polyvalent immunogenic composition e.g., an HIV vaccine
- Figures 1 A-IF The upper bound of potential epitope coverage of the HIV-I M group.
- a sliding window of length nine was applied across aligned sequences, moving down by one position. Different colors denote results for different numbers of sequences.
- the coverage given by the k most common 9-mers is plotted for Gag (Figs. IA and IB), Nef (Figs. 1C and ID) and Env gpl20 (Figs. IE and IF).
- Gaps inserted to maintain the alignment are treated as characters. The diminishing returns of adding more variants are evident, since, as k increases, increasingly rare forms are added.
- Gag Figs. IA and IB
- Nef Figs. 1C and ID
- the scores for each consecutive 9-mer are plotted in their natural order to show how diversity varies in different protein regions; both p24 in the center of Gag and the central region of Nef are particularly highly conserved.
- the scores for each 9-mer are reordered by coverage (a strategy also used in Fig. 4), to provide a sense of the overall population coverage of a given protein. Coverage of gpl20, even with 8 variant 9-mers, is particularly poor (Figs. IE and IF).
- Figures 2A-2C Mosaic initialization, scoring, and optimization. Fig.
- a set of k populations is generated by random 2- ⁇ oint recombination of natural sequences (1-6 populations of 50-500 sequences each have been tested). One sequence from each population is chosen (initially at random) for the mosaic cocktail, which is subsequently optimized. The cocktail sequences are scored by computing coverage (defined as the mean fraction of natural- sequence 9-mers included in the cocktail, averaged over all natural sequences in the input data set). Any new sequence that covers more epitopes will increase the score of the whole cocktail.
- Fig. 2B The fitness score of any individual sequence is the coverage of a cocktail containing that sequence plus the current representatives from other populations.
- the child If the score is higher than that of any of four randomly-selected population members, the child is inserted in the population in place of the weakest of the four, thus evolving an improved population; 4) if its score is a new high score, the new child replaces the current cocktail member from its population. Ten cycles of child generation are repeated for each population in turn, and the process iterates until improvement stalls.
- FIG. 3 Mosaic strain coverage for all HIV proteins.
- the level of 9- mer coverage achieved by sets of four mosaic proteins for each HIV protein is shown, with mosaics optimized using either the M group or the C subtype.
- the fraction of C subtype sequence 9-mers covered by mosaics optimized on the C subtype is shown in gray.
- Coverage of 9- mers found in non-C subtype M-group sequences by subtype-C-optimized mosaics (between-clade coverage) is shown in white.
- Coverage of subtype C sequences by M-group optimized mosaics is shown in black.
- B clade comparisons gave comparable results (data not shown).
- FIGS 4A-4F Coverage of M group sequences by different vaccine candidates, nine-mer by nine-mer.
- Each plot presents site-by-site coverage (i.e., for each nine-mer) of an M-group natural-sequence alignment by a single tri-valent vaccine candidate.
- Bars along the x-axis represent the proportion of sequences matched by the vaccine candidate for a given alignment position: 919 matches (in red), 8/9 (yellow), 7/9 (blue).
- Aligned 9-mers are sorted along the x-axis by exact-match coverage value. 656 positions include both the complete Gag and the central region of Nef.
- Fig. 4A Non-optimal natural sequences selected from among strains being used in vaccine studies (Kong et al, J. Virol. 77:12764-72 (2003)) including an individual clade A, B, and C viral sequences (Gag: GenBank accession numbers AF004885, K03455, and U52953; Nef core: AF069670, K02083, and U52953).
- Fig. 4A Non-optimal natural sequences selected from among strains being used in vaccine studies (Kong et al, J. Virol. 77:12764-72 (2003)) including an individual clade A, B, and C viral sequences (Gag: GenBank accession numbers AF004885, K03455, and U52953; Nef core: AF069670, K02083, and U52953).
- Fig. 4A Non-optimal natural sequences selected from among strains being used in vaccine studies (Kong et al, J. Virol. 77:
- FIG. 5 A and 5B Overall coverage of vaccine candidates: coverage of 9-mers in C clade sequences using different input data sets for mosaic optimization, allowing different numbers of antigens, and comparing to different candidate vaccines. Exact (blue), 8/9 (one-off; red), and 7/9 (two- off ; yellow) coverage was computed for mono- and polyvalent vaccine candidates for Gag (Fig. 5A) and Nef (core) (Fig.
- mosaic denotes sequences generated by the genetic algorithm
- opt. natural denotes intact natural sequences selected for maximum 9-mer coverage
- MSC consensus denotes a cocktail of 3 consensus sequences, for M-group, B- subtype, and C-subtype.
- a dashed line marks the coverage of a 4-sequence set of M-group mosaics (73.7-75.6%). Over 150 combinations of mosaic-number, virus subset, protein region, and optimization and test sets were tested.
- the C clade/B clade/M group comparisons illustrated in this figure are generally representative of within-clade, between- clade, and M group coverage.
- levels of mosaic coverage for B and C clade were very similar, despite there being many more C clade sequences in the Gag collection, and many more B clade sequences in the Nef collection (see Fig. 6 for a full B and C clade comparison).
- There were relatively few A and G clade sequences in the alignments 24 Gag, 75 Nef
- 9-mer coverage by M-group optimized mosaics was not as high as for subtypes for B and C clades (4-mosaic coverage for A and G subtypes was 63% for Gag, 74% for Nef), it was much better than a non-optimal cocktail (52% Gag, 52% for Nef).
- Figures 6A and 6B Overall coverage of vaccine candidates: coverage of 9-mers in B-clade, C-clade, and M-group sequences using different input data sets for mosaic optimization, allowing different numbers of antigens, and comparing to different candidate vaccines. Exact (blue), 8/9 (one-off; red), and 7/9 (two-off; yellow) coverage was computed for mono- and polyvalent vaccine candidates for Gag (Fig. 6A) and Nef (core) (Fig.
- mosaic denotes sequences generated by the genetic algorithm
- opt. natural denotes intact natural sequences selected for maximum 9-mer coverage
- MSC consensus denotes a cocktail of 3 consensus sequences, for M-group, B -subtype, and C-subtype. A dashed line is shown at the level of exact-match M-group coverage for a 4-valent mosaic set optimized on the M- group.
- Figures 7 A and 7B The distribution of 9-mers by frequency of occurrence in natural, consensus,and mosaic sequences. Occurrence counts (y-axis) for different 9-mer frequencies (x-axis) for vaccine cocktails produced by several methods.
- Fig. 7 A frequencies from 0-60% (for 9-mer frequencies > 60%, the distributions are equivalent for all methods).
- Fig. 7B Details of low-frequency 9-mers. Natural sequences have large numbers of rare or unique-to-isolate 9-mers (bottom right, Figs. 7A and 7B); these are unlikely to induce useful vaccine responses. Selecting optimal natural sequences does select for more common 9-mers, but rare and unique 9-mers are still included (top right, Figs. 7A and 7B).
- Consensus cocktails in contrast, under-represent uncommon 9-mers, especially below 20% frequency (bottom left, Figs. 7A and 7B).
- the number of lower-frequency 9-mers monotonically increases with the number of sequences (top left, each panel), but unique-to-isolate 9-mers are completely excluded (top left of right panel: * marks the absence of 9-mers with frequencies ⁇ 0.005).
- FIGS. 8A-8D HLA binding potential of vaccine candidates.
- Figs. 8A and 8B HLA binding motif counts.
- Figs. 8C and 8D number of unfavorable amino acids.
- natural sequences are marked with black circles ( ⁇ consensus sequences with blue triangles (A); inferred ancestral sequences with green squares (B); and mosaic sequences with red diamonds ( ⁇ ).
- Left panel shows HLA-binding-motif counts (Fig. 8A) and counts of unfavorable amino acids (Fig. 8C) calculated for individual sequences;
- Right panel Figs. 8B and 8D
- each graph (box-and- whiskers graph) shows the distribution of respective counts (motif counts or counts of unfavorable amino acids) based either on alignment of M group sequences (for individual sequences, Figs. 8A and 8C) or on 100 randomly composed cocktails of three sequences, one from each A, B and C subtypes (for sequence cocktails, Figs. 8B and 8D).
- the alignment was downloaded from the Los Alamos HIV database.
- the box extends from the 25 percentile to the 75 percentile, with the line at the median.
- the whiskers extending outside the box show the highest and lowest values.
- the present invention results from the realization that a polyvalent set of antigens comprising synthetic viral proteins, the sequences of which provide maximum coverage of non-rare short stretches of circulating viral sequences, constitutes a good vaccine candidate.
- the invention provides a "genetic algorithm" strategy to create such sets of polyvalent antigens as mosaic blends of fragments of an arbitrary set of natural protein sequences provided as inputs.
- the proteins Gag and the inner core (but not the whole) of Nef are ideal candidates for such antigens.
- the invention further provides optimized sets for these proteins.
- the genetic algorithm strategy of the invention uses unaligned protein sequences from the general population as an input data set, and thus has the virtue of being "alignment independent”. It creates artificial mosaic proteins that resemble proteins found in nature - the success of the consensus antigens in small animals models suggest this works well.
- 9 Mers are the focus of the studies described herein, however, different length peptides can be selected depending on the intended target. In accordance with the present approach, 9 mers (for example) that do not exist in nature or that are very rare can be excluded - this is an improvement relative to consensus sequences since the latter can contain some 9 mers (for example) that have not been found in nature, and relative to natural strains that almost invariably contain some 9 mers (for example) that are unique to that strain.
- the definition of fitness used for the genetic algorithm is that the most "fit" polyvalent cocktail is the combination of mosaic strains that gives the best coverage (highest fraction of perfect matches) of all of the 9 mers in the population and is subject to the constraint that no 9 mer is absent or rare in the population.
- the mosaics protein sets of the invention can be optimized with respect to different input data sets - this allows use of current data to assess virtues of a subtype or region specific vaccines from a T cell perspective.
- options that have been compared include:
- the approach described herein can be used to design peptide reagents to test HIV immune responses, and be applied to other variable pathogens as well.
- the present approach can be adapted to the highly variable virus Hepatitis C.
- proteins/polypeptides/peptides can be formulated into compositions with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier and/or adjuvant using techniques well known in the art. Suitable routes of administration include systemic (e.g. intramuscular or subcutaneous), oral, intravaginal, intrarectal and intranasal.
- the immunogens of the invention can be chemically synthesized and purified using methods which are well known to the ordinarily skilled artisan.
- the immunogens can also be synthesized by well-known recombinant DNA techniques.
- Nucleic acids encoding the immunogens of the invention can be used as components of, for example, a DNA vaccine wherein the encoding sequence is administered as naked DNA or, for example, a minigene encoding the immunogen can be present in a viral vector.
- the encoding sequences can be expressed, for example, in mycobacterium, in a recombinant chimeric adenovirus, or in a recombinant attenuated vesicular stomatitis virus.
- the encoding sequence can also be present, for example, in a replicating or non- replicating adenoviral vector, an adeno-associated virus vector, an attenuated mycobacterium tuberculosis vector, a Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) vector, a vaccinia or Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) vector, another pox virus vector, recombinant polio and other enteric virus vector, Salmonella species bacterial vector, Shigella species bacterial vector, decielean Equine Encephalitis Virus (VEE) vector, a Semliki Forest Virus vector, or a Tobacco Mosaic Virus vector.
- a replicating or non- replicating adenoviral vector an adeno-associated virus vector, an attenuated mycobacterium tuberculosis vector, a Bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG) vector, a vaccinia or Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) vector,
- the encoding sequence can also be expressed as a DNA plasmid with, for example, an active promoter such as a CMV promoter.
- an active promoter such as a CMV promoter.
- Other live vectors can also be used to express the sequences of the invention.
- Expression of the immunogen of the invention can be induced in a patient's own cells, by introduction into those cells of nucleic acids that encode the immunogen, preferably using codons and promoters that optimize expression in human cells. Examples of methods of making and using DNA vaccines are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,580,859, 5,589,466, and 5,703,055.
- adjuvants can be included in the compositions of the invention (or otherwise administered to enhance the immunogenic effect).
- suitable adjuvants include TRL-9 agonists, TRL-4 agonists, and TRL-7, 8 and 9 agonist combinations ( as well as alum).
- Adjuvants can take the form of oil and water emulsions. Squalene adjuvants can also be used.
- composition of the invention comprises an immunologically effective amount of the immunogen of this invention, or nucleic acid sequence encoding same, in a pharmaceutically acceptable delivery system.
- the compositions can be used for prevention and/or treatment of virus infection (e.g. HIV infection).
- virus infection e.g. HIV infection
- the compositions of the invention can be formulated using adjuvants, emulsifiers, pharmaceutically-acceptable carriers or other ingredients routinely provided in vaccine compositions.
- Optimum formulations can be readily designed by one of ordinary skill in the art and can include formulations for immediate release and/or for sustained release, and for induction of systemic immunity and/or induction of localized mucosal immunity (e.g, the formulation can be designed for intranasal, intravaginal or intrarectal administration).
- compositions can be administered by any convenient route including subcutaneous, intranasal, oral, intramuscular, or other parenteral or enteral route.
- the immunogens can be administered as a single dose or multiple doses.
- Optimum immunization schedules can be readily determined by the ordinarily skilled artisan and can vary with the patient, the composition and the effect sought.
- the invention contemplates the direct use of both the immunogen of the invention and/or nucleic acids encoding same and/or the immunogen expressed as as indicated above.
- a minigene encoding the immunogen can be used as a prime and/or boost.
- the invention includes any and all amino acid sequences disclosed herein, as well as nucleic acid sequences encoding same (and nucleic acids complementary to such encoding sequences).
- HIV-I Main (M) group Specifically disclosed herein are vaccine antigen sets optimized for single B or C subtypes, targeting regional epidemics, as well as for all HIV-I variants in global circulation [the HIV-I Main (M) group].
- M the HIV-I Main
- the focus is on designing polyvalent vaccines specifically for T -cell responses. HIV-I specific T-cells are likely to be crucial to an HIV-I -specific vaccine response: CTL responses are correlated with slow disease progression in humans (Oxenius et al, J. Infect. Dis. 189:1199-1208 (2004)), and the importance of CTL responses in non- human primate vaccination models is well-established.
- Vaccine elicited cellular immune responses help control pathogenic SIV or SHIV, and reduce the likelihood of disease after challenge with pathogenic virus (Barouch et al, Science 290:486-492 (2000)).
- Temporary depletion of CD8+ T cells results in increased viremia in SIV-infected rhesus macaques (Schmitz et al, Science 283:857-860 (1999)).
- escape mutations has been associated with disease progression, indicating that CTL responses help constrain viral replication in vivo (Barouch et al, J. Virol. 77:7367-7375 (2003)), and so vaccine-stimulated memory responses that could block potential escape routes may be of value.
- Env highly variable Envelope
- vaccine antigens will also need to be tailored to elicit these antibody responses
- T-cell vaccine components can target more conserved proteins to trigger responses that are more likely to cross-react. But even the most conserved HIV-I proteins are diverse enough that variation will be an issue.
- Artificial central-sequence vaccine approaches, consensus and ancestral sequences (Gaschen et al, Science 296:2354-2360 (2002), Gao et al, J. Virol. 79:1154-1163 (2005), Doria-Rose et al, J. Virol.
- a single amino acid substitution can mediate T-cell escape, and as one or more amino acids in many T-cell epitopes differ between HIV-I strains, the potential effectiveness of responses to any one vaccine antigen is limited. Whether a particular mutation will diminish T-cell cross-reactivity is epitope- and T-cell-specific, although some changes can broadly affect between-clade cross-reactivity (Norris et al, AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses 20:315-325 (2004)). Including more variants in a polyvalent vaccine could enable responses to a broader range of circulating variants. It could also prime the immune system against common escape variants (Jones et al, J. Exp. Med.
- HlV-I sequence data The reference alignments from the 2005 HIV sequence database (http://hiv.lanl.gov), which contain one sequence per person, were used, supplemented by additional recently available C subtype Gag and Nef sequences from Durban, South Africa (GenBank accession numbers AY856956-AY857186) (Kiepiela et al, Nature 432:769-75 (2004)). This set contained 551 Gag and 1,131 Nef M group sequences from throughout the globe; recombinant sequences were included as well as pure subtype sequences for exploring M group diversity.
- GAs are computational analogues of biological processes (evolution, populations, selection, recombination) used to find solutions to problems that are difficult to solve analytically (Holland, Adaptation in Natural and Artificial Systems: An Introductory Analysis with Applicatins to Biology, Control, and Artificial Intelligence, (M.I.T. Press, Cambridge, MA (1992))). Solutions for a given input are "evolved” though a process of random modification and selection according to a “fitness” (optimality) criterion. GAs come in many flavors; a "steady-state co- evolutionary multi-population" GA was implemented.
- Step-state refers to generating one new candidate solution at a time, rather than a whole new population at once; and "co-evolutionary” refers to simultaneously evolving several distinct populations that work together to form a complete solution.
- the input is an unaligned set of natural sequences; a candidate solution is a set of k pseudo-natural "mosaic" sequences, each of which is formed by concatenating sections of natural sequences.
- the fitness criterion is population coverage, defined as the proportion of all 9-amino-acid sequence fragments (potential epitopes) in the input sequences that are found in the cocktail.
- Mosaic sequence lengths fall within the distribution of natural sequence lengths as a consequence of mosaic construction: recombination is only allowed at identical regions, reinforced by an explicit software prohibition against excessive lengths to prevent reduplication of repeat regions. (Such "in frame” insertion of reduplicated epitopes could provide another way of increasing coverage without generating unnatural 9-mers, but their inclusion would create “unnatural” proteins.)
- the cocktail contains one randomly chosen "winner” from each population.
- the fitness score for any individual sequence in a population is the coverage value for the cocktail consisting of that sequence plus the current winners from the other populations. The individual fitness of any sequence in a population therefore depends dynamically upon the best sequences found in the other populations.
- Optimization proceeds one population at a time. For each iteration, two "parent" sequences are chosen. The first parent is chosen using "2- tournament" selection: two sequences are picked at random from the current population, scored, and the better one is chosen. This selects parents with a probability inversely proportional to their fitness rank within the population, without the need to actually compute the fitness of all individuals. The second parent is chosen in the same way (50% of the time), or is selected at random from the set of natural sequences. 2-point homologous crossover between the parents is then used to generate a "child” sequence. Any child containing a 9- mer that was very rare in the natural population (found less than 3 times) is rejected immediately.
- the new sequence is scored, and its fitness is compared with the fitnesses of four randomly chosen sequences from the same population. If any of the four randomly chosen sequences has a score lower than that of the new sequence, it is replaced in the population by the new sequence. Whenever a sequence is encountered that yields a better score than the current population "winner”, that sequence becomes the winner for the current population and so is subsequently used in the cocktail to evaluate sequences in other populations. A few such optimization cycles (typically 10) are applied to each population in turn, and this process continues cycling through the populations until evolution stalls (i.e., no improvement has been made for a defined number of generations). At this point, the entire procedure is restarted using newly generated random starting populations, and the restarts are continued until no further improvement is seen. The GA was run on each data set with n - 50 or 500; each run was continued until no further improvement occurred for 12-24 hours on a 2 GHz Pentium processor. Cocktails were generated having k - 1, 3, 4, or 6 mosaic sequences.
- the GA also enables optional inclusion of one or more fixed sequences of interest (for example, a consensus) in the cocktail and will evolve the other elements of the cocktail in order to optimally complement that fixed strain. As these solutions were suboptimal, they are not included here.
- An additional program selects from the input file the k best natural strains that in combination provide the best population coverage.
- Vaccine design optimization strategies Figure 1 shows an idealized level of 9-mer coverage. In reality, high-frequency 9-mers often conflict: because of local co-variation, the optimal amino acid for one 9-mer may differ from that for an overlapping 9-mer. To design mosaic protein sets that optimize population coverage, the relative benefits of each amino acid must be evaluated in combination with nearby variants. For example, Alanine (Ala) and Glutamate (GIu) might each frequently occur in adjacent positions, but if the Ala-Glu combination is never observed in nature, it should be excluded from the vaccine.
- Several optimization strategies were investigated: a greedy algorithm, a semi-automated compatible-9mer assembly strategy, an alignment-based genetic algorithm (GA), and an alignment-independent GA.
- the alignment-independent GA generated mosaics with the best population coverage.
- This GA generates a user-specified number of mosaic sequences from a set of unaligned protein sequences, explicitly excluding rare or unnatural epitope-length fragments (potentially introduced at recombination breakpoints) that could induce non-protective vaccine-antigen-specific responses.
- These candidate vaccine sequences resemble natural proteins, but are assembled from frequency-weighted fragments of database sequences recombined at homologous breakpoints (Fig. 2); they approach maximal coverage of 9-mers for the input population.
- the initial design focused on protein regions meeting specific criteria: i) relatively low variability, ii) high levels of recognition in natural infection, iii) a high density of known epitopes and iv) either early responses upon infection or CD8+ T- cell responses associated with good outcomes in infected patients.
- Fig. 3 An assessment was made of the level of 9-mer coverage achieved by mosaics for different HIV proteins (Fig. 3). For each protein, a set of four mosaics was generated using either the M group or the B- and C-subtypes alone; coverage was scored on the C subtype.
- Nef is the HIV protein most frequently recognized by T-cells (Frahm et al, J. Virol. 78:2187-200 (2004)) and the target for the earliest response in natural infection (Lichterfeld et al, Aids 18:1383-92 (2004)). While overall it is variable (Fig. 3), its central region is as conserved as Gag (Fig. 1). It is not yet clear what optimum proteins for inclusion in a vaccine might be, and mosaics could be designed to maximize the potential coverage of even the most variable proteins (Fig. 3), but the prospects for global coverage are better for conserved proteins.
- Nef The conserved portion of Nef that were included contains the most highly recognized peptides in HIV-I (Frahm et al, J. Virol. 78:2187-200 (2004)), but as a protein fragment, would not allow Nef's immune inhibitory functions (e.g. HLA class I down- regulation (Blagoveshchenskaya, Cell 111:853-66 (2002))). Both Gag and Nef are densely packed with overlapping well-characterized CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell epitopes, presented by many different HLA molecules (http ://ww w .hi v .lanl .
- T-cell responses have been associated with low viral set points in infected individuals (Masemola et al, J. Virol. 78:3233-43 (2004)).
- Figure 5 summarizes total coverage for the different vaccine design strategies, from single proteins through combinations of mosaic proteins, and compares within-subtype optimization to M group optimization.
- the performance of a single mosaic is comparable to the best single natural strain or a consensus sequence.
- the optimized natural-sequence cocktail does better than the consensus cocktail: the consensus sequences are more similar to each other than are natural strains, and are therefore somewhat redundant. Including even just two mosaic variants, however, markedly increases coverage, and four and six mosaic proteins give progressively better coverage than polyvalent cocktails of natural or consensus strains.
- Within-subtype optimized mosaics perform best - with four mosaic antigens 80-85% of the 9- mers are perfectly matched - but between-subtype coverage of these sets falls off dramatically, to 50-60%.
- mosaic proteins optimized using the full M group give coverage of approximately 75-80% for individual subtypes, comparable to the coverage of the M group as a whole (Figs. 5 and 6). If imperfect 8/9 matches are allowed, both M group optimized and within- subtype optimized mosaics approach 90% coverage.
- the mosaics exclude unique or very rare 9-mers, while natural strains generally contain 9- mers present in no other sequence.
- natural M group Gag sequences had a median of 35 (range 0-148) unique 9-mers per sequence.
- Retention of HLA-anchor motifs was also explored, and anchor motif frequencies were found to be comparable between four mosaics and three natural strains.
- Natural antigens did exhibit an increase in number of motifs per antigen, possibly due to inclusion of strain-specific motifs (Fig. 8).
- variable proteins like Env have limited coverage of 9-mers, although mosaics improve coverage relative to natural strains.
- three M group natural proteins one each selected from the A, B, and C clades, and currently under study for vaccine design (Seaman et al, J. Virol. 79:2956-63 (2005)) perfectly match only 39% of the 9-mers in M group proteins, and 65% have at least 8/9 matches.
- three M group Env mosaics match 47% of 9-mers perfectly, and 70% have at least an 8/9 match.
- the code written to design polyvalent mosaic antigens is available, and could readily be applied to any input set of variable proteins, optimized for any desired number of antigens.
- the code also allows selection of optimal combinations of k natural strains, enabling rational selection of natural antigens for polyvalent vaccines. Included in Table 1 are the best natural strains for Gag and Nef population coverage of current database alignments.
- Nef central region
- B-subtype 1 natural sequence
- Nef central region
- B-subtype 6 natural sequences
- Nef central region
- C-subtype 1 natural sequence
- Nef central region
- C-subtype 3 natural sequences
- C.ZA.04.04ZASK180B1 C.ZA.04.04ZASK139B1 C.ZA._.ZASW15_AF397568
- Nef central region
- M-group 1 natural sequence
- the above-described study focuses on the design of T- cell vaccine components to counter HIV diversity at the moment of infection, and to block viral escap e routes and thereby minimize disease progression in infected individuals.
- the polyvalent mosaic protein strategy developed here for HIV-I vaccine design could be applied to any variable protein, to other pathogens, and to other immunological problems. For example, incorporating a minimal number of variant peptides into T-cell response assays could markedly increase sensitivity without excessive cost: a set of k mosaic proteins provides the maximum coverage possible for k antigens.
- a centralized (consensus or ancestral) gene and protein strategy has been proposed previously to address HIV diversity (Gaschen et al, Science 296:2354-2360 (2002)).
- the mosaic protein design improves on consensus or natural immunogen design by co-optimizing reagents for a polyclonal vaccine, excluding rare CD8+ T-cell epitopes, and incorporating variants that, by virtue of their frequency at the population level, are likely to be involved in escape pathways.
- the mosaic antigens maximize the number of epitope-length variants that are present in a small, practical number of vaccine antigens.
- T- cell mosaic antigens would be best employed in the context of a strong polyvalent immune response; improvements in other areas of vaccine design and a combination of the best strategies, incorporating mosaic antigens to cover diversity, may ultimately enable an effective cross-reactive vaccine- induced immune response against HIV-I.
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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AU2006283101B2 (en) | 2013-03-07 |
EP1917040A2 (en) | 2008-05-07 |
US9492532B2 (en) | 2016-11-15 |
US9011875B2 (en) | 2015-04-21 |
US8119140B2 (en) | 2012-02-21 |
US20120231028A1 (en) | 2012-09-13 |
EP1917040A4 (en) | 2012-12-12 |
CA2620874A1 (en) | 2007-03-01 |
CN101969996A (en) | 2011-02-09 |
AU2006283101A1 (en) | 2007-03-01 |
US20150359875A1 (en) | 2015-12-17 |
US20110150915A1 (en) | 2011-06-23 |
WO2007024941A3 (en) | 2010-01-28 |
US20090324631A1 (en) | 2009-12-31 |
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