Abstract

The vaccine development strategies have evolved from using an entire organism as an immunogen to a single antigen and further towards an epitope. Since an epitope is a relatively tiny and immunologically relevant part of an antigen, it has the potential to stimulate more robust and specific immune responses while causing minimal adverse effects. As a result, the recent focus of vaccine development has been to develop multi-epitope vaccines that can target multiple virulence mechanisms. Accordingly, we designed multi-epitope vaccine candidates B (multi-B-cell epitope immunogen) and CTB-B (an adjuvant – cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) – attached to immunogen B) against S. aureus by employing immunoinformatics approaches. The designed vaccines are composed of B-cell epitope segments (20-mer) of the eight well-characterized S. aureus virulence factors, namely ClfB, FnbpA, Hla, IsdA, IsdB, LukE, SdrD, and SdrE connected in series. The designed vaccines were expressed, purified, and administered to C57BL/6 mice with Freund adjuvant to evaluate the immunogenicity and protective efficacy. The results revealed that the immunized mice showed high IgG titers for the immunogen, and the antibody titers increased significantly following the second immunization. However, the generated antibodies did not protect the mice from infection. The interaction of anti-B antibodies with source virulence factors showed that the generated antibodies have no binding affinity with any of the corresponding virulence factors. Our results demonstrate the limitation of the in silico designed B-cell multi-epitope vaccine and suggest that a protein domain carrying both linear and conformational B-cell epitopes might be a better choice for developing an effective multi-epitope vaccine against S. aureus.

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