In silico design and evaluation of multi-epitope dengue virus vaccines: a promising approach to combat global dengue burden
Dengue virus, a pervasive mosquito-borne pathogen, imposes a substantial global health burden and is responsible for numerous fatalities annually globally, with tropical and sub-tropical regions particularly susceptible to dengue outbreaks. Despite decades of efforts, there has been no effective tre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Discover Applied Sciences 2024-04, Vol.6 (4), p.210, Article 210 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Dengue virus, a pervasive mosquito-borne pathogen, imposes a substantial global health burden and is responsible for numerous fatalities annually globally, with tropical and sub-tropical regions particularly susceptible to dengue outbreaks. Despite decades of efforts, there has been no effective treatment or prevention for dengue, which makes it a life-threatening disease. Hence, this study proposes an innovative bioinformatics-driven approach to construct a vaccine targeting the dengue virus. The study involved a comprehensive analysis of conserved regions of dengue virus serotypes 1–4's non-structural proteins (NS1, NS3, and NS5) and structural protein (E) to predict the potential B & T-cell epitopes which were linked with appropriate adjuvants and linkers to generate four distinct vaccine candidates. The constructed vaccine models underwent rigorous evaluation, considering physicochemical attributes, structural integrity, population coverage, and immune system response through simulation. The results confirm that these vaccine candidates are non-allergenic, non-toxic, antigenic, and immunogenic. Additionally, they exhibit 99.70% world population coverage and 100% conservation across all dengue strains, which is crucial for vaccine efficacy. A Ramachandran plot showed that 95.6% of the amino acid residues of the candidates belong to the optimal zone, while around 4% are in additional allowed regions. Further, molecular docking and dynamic simulation of interaction with the human toll-like receptor 4, a fundamental component of innate immunity, was carried out to gain more insight into interaction dynamics. As a result of these analyses, the candidates' binding dynamics and structural stability were revealed. Overall, this study presents promising vaccine candidates for addressing dengue's global health burden. Their robust design and demonstrated immunogenicity make them attractive candidates for further experimental testing and development as potential vaccines against current strains and future variants.
Article highlights
Innovative bioinformatics-driven strategy leads to multi-epitope dengue vaccine development.
The vaccine candidates are predicted to be safe, effective against all strains, and cover 99.70% of the global population.
Molecular simulations provide key insights into vaccine's structural integrity and receptor interactions. |
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ISSN: | 3004-9261 2523-3963 3004-9261 2523-3971 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s42452-024-05782-9 |