Abstract

The development of a prophylactic vaccine for hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a global health challenge. Cumulative evidence supports the importance of antibodies targeting the HCV E2 envelope glycoprotein to facilitate viral clearance. However, a significant challenge for a B cell-based vaccine is focusing the immune response on conserved E2 epitopes capable of eliciting neutralizing antibodies not associated with viral escape. We hypothesized that glycosylation might influence the antigenicity and immunogenicity of E2. Accordingly, we performed head-to-head molecular, antigenic, and immunogenic comparisons of soluble E2 (sE2) produced in (i) mammalian (HEK293) cells, which confer mostly complex- and high-mannose-type glycans; and (ii) insect (Sf9) cells, which impart mainly paucimannose-type glycans. Mass spectrometry demonstrated that all 11 predicted N-glycosylation sites were utilized in both HEK293- and Sf9-derived sE2, but that N-glycans in insect sE2 were on average smaller and less complex. Both proteins bound CD81 and were recognized by conformation-dependent antibodies. Mouse immunogenicity studies revealed that similar polyclonal antibody responses were generated against antigenic domains A to E of E2. Although neutralizing antibody titers showed that Sf9-derived sE2 induced moderately stronger responses than did HEK293-derived sE2 against the homologous HCV H77c isolate, the two proteins elicited comparable neutralization titers against heterologous isolates. Given that global alteration of HCV E2 glycosylation by expression in different hosts did not appreciably affect antigenicity or overall immunogenicity, a more productive approach to increasing the antibody response to neutralizing epitopes may be complete deletion, rather than just modification, of specific N-glycans proximal to these epitopes.IMPORTANCE The development of a vaccine for hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a global health challenge. A major challenge for vaccine development is focusing the immune response on conserved regions of the HCV envelope protein, E2, capable of eliciting neutralizing antibodies. Modification of E2 by glycosylation might influence the immunogenicity of E2. Accordingly, we performed molecular and immunogenic comparisons of E2 produced in mammalian and insect cells. Mass spectrometry demonstrated that the predicted glycosylation sites were utilized in both mammalian and insect cell E2, although the glycan types in insect cell E2 were smaller and less complex. Mouse immunogenicity studies revealed similar polyclonal antibody responses. However, insect cell E2 induced stronger neutralizing antibody responses against the homologous isolate used in the vaccine, albeit the two proteins elicited comparable neutralization titers against heterologous isolates. A more productive approach for vaccine development may be complete deletion of specific glycans in the E2 protein.

Highlights

  • The development of a prophylactic vaccine for hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a global health challenge

  • In order to investigate the effect of different glycosylation patterns on the antigenicity and immunogenicity of HCV E2, we produced a soluble form of E2 lacking the hydrophobic C-terminal transmembrane anchor in mammalian (HEK293) and insect (Sf9) cells, which are known to attach different N-glycan moieties to proteins [33, 34]

  • The same DNA fragment was used for expression of soluble E2 (sE2) in Sf9 insect cells using the pAcGP67-B vector, in which expression is controlled by the polyhedrin promoter (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The development of a prophylactic vaccine for hepatitis C virus (HCV) remains a global health challenge. A major challenge for vaccine development is focusing the immune response on conserved regions of the HCV envelope protein, E2, capable of eliciting neutralizing antibodies. Other complicating factors for vaccine development include low immunogenicity of viral envelope proteins and antibody responses directed to regions that display a high mutational rate of change [10]. A number of studies have highlighted the role of N-linked glycosylation in masking or shielding E2 epitopes from recognition by bNAbs [11,12,13,14,15], as observed for HIV and influenza virus [16] Such glycan shielding may hinder bNAb induction by reducing the exposure of neutralizing epitopes to the humoral immune system, further complicating the development of a B cell-based HCV vaccine

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