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Title: Polynucleotide encoding
a mutated HIV gp41 polypeptide
United States Patent: 7,253,270
Issued: August 7, 2007
Inventors: Serres; Pierre F
(Saint Genis Laval, FR)
Assignee: Mymetics SA
(Saint Genis Laval, FR)
Appl. No.:
10/198,938
Filed: July 22, 2002
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Training Courses -- Pharm/Biotech/etc.
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Abstract
The invention provides a method of
searching for and obtaining a vaccine against the pathogenic effects
related to the infection of an animal or human host by a retrovirus that
penetrates into a target cell of the host, and a vaccine obtained by the
method are provided. The method includes preparing candidate vaccine
agents based on a polypeptide comprising at least part of an envelope
protein of a pathogenic strain of the retrovirus and selecting as the
vaccine a modified polypeptide chosen from polypeptides that induces an
immune response directed against an immunodominant region of an envelope
protein of the retrovirus and not against a protein of the host.
Description of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method
for obtaining vaccines for preventing the pathogenic effects related, in
humans and in vertebrate animals, to retroviral infections.
The pathogenic effects related to a retroviral infection are the harmful
effects, including possible oncogenic or immunosuppressive effects,
induced by the introduction of a retrovirus into the body of a host
(mammal, bird or alternatively fish), followed by the penetration and by
the replication of said retrovirus in the cells of the host which are
target cells for the retrovirus, that is to say cells into which the virus
is capable of penetrating.
Retroviruses are thus named because they have the capacity, by virtue of
the enzyme called reverse transcriptase, of carrying out transcription of
RNA to DNA, whereas in living beings, the genetic information usually goes
from the DNA of the chromosomes to proteins, via messenger RNA.
Three subfamilies can be distinguished in the retroviral family: the
oncoviruses, the lentiviruses and the spumaviruses.
The oncoviruses are retroviruses thus termed because they can be
associated with cancers and malignant infections. There may be mentioned,
for example, leukemogenic viruses (such as the avian leukemia virus (ALV),
the murine leukemia virus (MULV), also called Moloney virus, the feline
leukemia virus (FELV), human leukemia viruses such as HTLV1 and HTLV2, the
simian leukemia virus or STLV, the bovine leukemia virus or BLV), the
primate type D oncoviruses, the type B oncoviruses which are inducers of
mammary tumors, or oncoviruses which cause a rapid cancer (such as the
Rous sarcoma virus or RSV); see for example STEHELIN et al., J. Mol. Biol.
101: 349-365 (1976).
The lentiviruses are thus named because they are responsible for
slow-progressing pathological conditions which very frequently involve
immunosuppressive phenomena, including AIDS.
The appended Table 1 indicates, by way of illustration, the pathological
conditions associated with some lentiviruses, as well as the main target
cells for these lentiviruses.
The spumaviruses manifest fairly low specificity for a given cell type or
a given species, and they are sometimes associated with immunosuppressive
phenomena; that is the case, for example, for the simian foamy virus (or
SFV).
One of the aims of the present invention is the development of methods and
vaccine products intended for effectively preventing the pathogenic
effects, including the oncogenic or immunosuppressive effects, related to
the infection of a host organism by a retrovirus.
Immunosuppression related to infection has been observed for a large
number of retroviruses, and may be considered as a pathogenic constant of
retroviral infection; see in particular BENDINELLI et al., Advances in
Cancer Research 45: 125-181 (1985). This is the case in particular for
lentivirus infections. It is also the case in a good number of oncovirus
infections; see for example P. SONIGO in the book "SIDA et infection par
VIH" [AIDS and HIV Infection], MONTAGNIER et al. (Medecine Science
Flammarion), pages 113-122 (1989).
Many human and animal vaccines have been tested for preventing the
pathogenic effects of retrovirus infections but, as a general rule, these
vaccines are not very effective or are ineffective. In particular, in the
field of human or animal AIDS, it is observed that, 14 years after the
discovery of the HIV virus (BARRE-SINOUSSI et al., Science 220: 868-871,
1983), it has not yet been possible to find a vaccine which is able to
effectively stop a post-vaccine HIV or SIV infection; see for example
LINHART et al., AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 13: 593-599 (1997);
VOGT et al., Vaccine 13: 202-208 (1995); and LETVIN et al., J. Virol. 69:
4569-4571 (1995).
The majority of the vaccine preparations used comprise proteins of the
retroviral envelope in various forms, for example inactivated viruses,
envelope proteins such as the gp 120 and gp 160 proteins of HIV (see in
particular GORSE, G. J., Vaccine 10: 383-388, 1992), virus cores with
envelope proteins, or envelope proteins associated with various vectors (chimeric
viruses, bacteria); see Levy J. A., Trans. Med. Rev. 2 : 265-271, 1988 and
Microbiol. Rev. 57: 183-289, 1993, in particular page 247.
Other preparations use fragments of the retroviral envelope or
immunodominant peptides derived from the envelope glycoproteins, these
peptides being presented in various forms (lipopeptides, peptides bound to
a supporting protein), so as to make them immunogenic; see in particular
Eriksson et al., Vaccine, 11: 859-865 (1993).
The vaccine strategies conventionally described, for example in the field
of human, simian or feline AIDS, recommend not modifying the conserved and
immunodominant epitopes of the envelope proteins, which may appear to be
completely logical. Indeed, on the one hand, these conserved epitopes are
common to different viral strains, which is favorable to the production of
a vaccine which has to induce an immune response directed against a
majority of strains. On the other hand, these immunodominant epitopes are
well recognized by the cellular or humoral immune system during the
vaccinal and infectious process and, moreover, they frequently represent
neutralization sites; see for example HO et al., J. Virol. 61: 2024-2028
(1987); JOHNSON et al., J. Exp. Med. 175: 961-971 (1992); SHAFFERMAN et
al., P.N.A.S. U.S.A. 88: 7126-7130 (1991); and HAMMOND et al., J. Immunol.
146: 1470-1477 (1991).
The method of the invention consists, by contrast, in modifying the
conserved and immunodominant epitopes of certain proteins of the viral
envelope, in order to obtain an effective vaccine.
Indeed, the authors of the present invention have discovered that
conserved and immunodominant regions of the retroviral envelope may be
responsible for harmful autoimmune phenomena. By way of example, in the
case of human AIDS, they have observed that certain conserved and
immunodominant regions of the HIV envelope exhibit three-dimensional
structural analogies and/or cross-reactions with certain regions of at
least one protein of the human immune system, such that the
administration, as a vaccine, of a viral protein containing said intact
regions induces an immune response which is responsible for harmful
autoimmune reactions leading to vaccine failure.
At the origin of the present invention, there is, on the one hand, the
observation mentioned above that conserved and immunodominant regions of
certain retroviruses, usually present in vaccine preparations, are
precisely, in a good number of cases, regions which cause harmful
autoimmune reactions because they exhibit three-dimensional structural
analogies and/or cross-reactions with certain proteins of the host for the
virus. At the origin of the present invention, there is also, on the other
hand, the observation that said proteins of the host use the same target
cell, or the same target cells, as said retroviruses. All these
observations carried out by the authors of the invention have led them to
think that the retroviral envelope proteins and the host proteins which
exhibit three-dimensional structural analogies and/or cross-reactions bind
in many cases to the same target cells and possess, on these target cells,
common membrane receptors.
It is said that a protein exhibits cross-reactivity with another protein
when it is possible to obtain, by in vivo or in vitro immunization with
the aid of one of said proteins, an immune response also directed against
the other protein, for example when this immunization induces a (so-called
B type) humoral response and makes it possible to obtain and to select at
least one monoclonal antibody which is capable of recognizing the other
protein, or when the same cellular immune response (that is to say of the
T type) induced in vitro by one of the proteins recognizes the two
proteins, according to the known tests for detecting a T-type immune
response, such as for example the tests for cytotoxicity in vitro. It is
known that the term "immunization" denotes the process of induction of an
immune response following stimulation, by bringing immunocompetent cells
of a host into contact in vivo or in vitro with an antigen, and that one
of the aims of the administration of a vaccine agent is precisely to
obtain such an immunization.
The subject of the invention is therefore a method of obtaining a vaccine
against the pathogenic effects related to the infection of an animal or
human host by a retrovirus capable of penetrating into a target cell of
said host, said target cell possessing a membrane receptor for a protein
of said host, method in which a vaccine agent based on a polypeptide
comprising at least part of an envelope protein of a pathogenic strain of
said retrovirus is prepared, and in which said polypeptide is prepared in
a modified form, it being understood that: said part of the envelope
protein is chosen from those which comprise at least one fragment of an
immunodominant region of said envelope protein, said fragment containing
at least one amino acid which is a conserved amino acid of said
immunodominant region and which is present in said pathogenic strain, said
polypeptide, in the unmodified state, induces an immune response directed
both against said immunodominant region and against the protein of the
host, and said modified polypeptide is chosen from those which induce an
immune response directed against said immunodominant region of the
envelope protein and not against the protein of the host.
In the definition of the method of the invention which has just been
given, the vaccine agent is said to be "based" on a modified polypeptide.
This means that the vaccine agent comprises such a modified polypeptide,
but this does not mean that the vaccine agent is necessarily of an
exclusively polypeptide nature. In fact, in this vaccine agent, said
polypeptide may be optionally bound to (in particular covalently) or
associated, in a manner known per se, with any biocompatible molecule
which may be chosen, for example from polymers, lipids, peptides
(including lipopeptides, glycopeptides, proteins), nucleic acids,
oligosaccharides and the like. Said biocompatible molecule may in
particular serve as a support for the polypeptide immunogenic agent. It
can also serve to modify the conformation of the polypeptide and, in the
latter case, said molecule should be considered as a substituent modifying
the amino acid residue to which it is attached, said substituent thus
modifying, in the final analysis, the antigenicity of the polypeptide of
which this amino acid residue is a part.
The method of the invention may comprise, at least in a preliminary
research phase, a step consisting in selecting the polypeptides
(unmodified) comprising at least part, as defined above, of the viral
envelope protein of a pathogenic strain of the retrovirus. This protein
part, which comprises at least one immunogenic fragment of an
immunodominant region, is such that the polypeptide (unmodified) is
capable of inducing an immune response directed both against the viral
protein (more precisely against the fragment of the immunodominant region
contained in said part) and against the protein of the host, and it is the
existence of such an immune response, directed against the viral envelope
protein and against the protein of the host, which defines, in the present
application, the pathogenic character of a viral strain. It is thus
possible to select the polypeptides (unmodified) comprising such a
fragment.
A polypeptide fragment is said to be immunogenic if the immunization of a
host, in vivo or in vitro, with said fragment, optionally bound to an
appropriate support (such as a protein, a lipid or a polypeptide), makes
it possible to obtain an immune response (of the B type and/or of the T
type, directed against said polypeptide fragment).
In the present application, when reference is made to an immune response,
without any other specific information, it is an immune response of a
vertebrate, following immunization in vitro or in vivo.
The method of the invention may also comprise at least one step consisting
in modifying, in the manner which will be indicated below, a polypeptide
thus selected, and in choosing among the polypeptides those modified, at
least one modified polypeptide which induces an immune response directed
against the viral envelope protein and not against the protein of the
host.
Thus, while the prior art taught, as noted above, not to modify the
conserved and immunodominant epitopes of the retroviral envelope proteins,
the aim of the method of the invention is, by contrast, to modify the
antigenicity of such epitopes so as to obtain a differential immune
response with respect to the viral envelope protein and to a protein of
the host.
It is known that in order to modify the antigenicity of an immunogenic
fragment of a polypeptide, it is possible to modify said polypeptide with
the aid of a mutation affecting at least one amino acid. A definition will
be given later of what "mutation" should be understood to mean here. The
mutated amino acid may be present in the immunogenic fragment, or even in
a region of the polypeptide outside said fragment. It is in fact known
that the modification of an amino acid situated outside a fragment can
affect the spatial structure of said fragment and therefore its
antigenicity; in particular, it has been shown that the conformation of an
amino acid residue, in a peptide, can be influenced by the nature of the
amino acid residues at positions going from +8 to -8 relative to this
amino acid residue; see for example GARNIER et al., J. Mol. Biol. 120:
97-120 (1978). Beyond this, the nature of the amino acid residues still
has an influence, but this influence is neither symmetrical nor
quantifiable from the sole knowledge of the peptide sequence considered.
A mutated amino acid can therefore be situated in the modified
polypeptide, inside or outside the immunogenic fragment. When it is
outside the immunogenic fragment, it is generally not separated from the
nearest end of said immunogenic fragment, in the polypeptide chain, by
more than eight (and in particular by more than seven) amino acid
residues. In particular, an amino acid, mutated in accordance with the
present invention, and situated outside the immunogenic fragment, is
generally not separated by more than eight amino acid residues, and in
particular by more than seven amino acid residues, from the nearest
conserved amino acid belonging to the immunodominant region of which at
least one fragment is contained in the unmodified polypeptide.
The modified polypeptide in accordance with the present invention may be,
for example, the whole envelope protein of a pathogenic viral strain,
modified by at least one mutation as indicated above. The modified
polypeptide may also be part of the envelope protein of a pathogenic viral
strain, modified by at least one mutation as indicated above, said part
comprising at least one immunogenic fragment as defined above. The
modified polypeptide may also be a chimeric protein comprising at least
part of the envelope protein, said part of the envelope protein being as
defined above and comprising at least one mutation.
The modified polypeptide used according to the invention may be, for
example, a transmembrane glycoprotein of a retrovirus or a fragment of a
transmembrane glycoprotein, in particular a fragment comprising an outer
region of said transmembrane glycoprotein (modified), that is to say a
region which is present on the outer surface of the viral membrane. Of
course, such a protein fragment comprises at least part of an
immunodominant region, as indicated above. When reference is made to an
"outer" region of a protein, it is more precisely its surface which is
accessible to the solvent, which may be defined in particular with the aid
of software such as X-plor (see below) using the algorithm described by
Lee & Richards, J. Mol. Biol. 55: 379-400, 1971. Said polypeptide may also
be in the form of an oligomer of at least part of said transmembrane
glycoprotein, in the modified state.
The definition given above of the method of the invention implies that the
polypeptide used comprises at least part of an immunodominant and
conserved region of a viral envelope protein. In the description of the
present application, "conserved region" describes a region, optionally
reduced to a single amino acid residue, of the viral protein, where, for a
majority of strains of a given virus (for example in at least 6 strains
out of 10 approximately), there are one or more identical or functionally
analogous amino acids situated at the same position in peptide sequence
alignments of said protein of the various strains. Such an identical or
functionally analogous amino acid is called conserved amino acid. The
notion of conservation of functionally analogous amino acids is known, and
there are numerous substitution matrices which make it possible to
quantify this notion (Dayhoff, M. O. et al., in Atlas of Protein Sequence
and Structure, 1978, Vol. 5, Suppl. 3, Chapters 22 and 23).
The conserved regions can be easily determined, after sequencing of
proteins of various strains of the virus studied, by methods of multiple
alignments of the sequences obtained. For that, it is possible to use, for
example, the Clustal-w program (Thompson J. D. et al., Nucleic Acids
Research 22: 4673-4680, 1994). Moreover, the protein sequences of various
viral strains are often accessible on data banks. For example, the Web
server of the Los Alamos HIV data base has the HIV1, HIV2, SIV and FIV
sequences which are regularly updated. The address of this server on the
Internet network is:
http://hiv-web.lanl.gov/HTML/sequences.html
The appended Tables 2a, 2b, 2c and 2d are examples of sequence alignment
of the regions belonging to the homologous envelope glycoproteins of
region 545-682 of the HIV transmembrane glycoprotein (entry SWISSPROT
ENV_HV1 BR), respectively for HIV1, HIV2, FIV and SIV. Table 2a shows the
sequences represented by SEQ ID NOs: 1-29 in number order from top to
bottom. Table 2b shows the sequences represented by SEQ ID NOs: 30-39 in
number order from top to bottom. Table 2c shows the sequences represented
by SEQ ID NOs: 40-46 in number order from top to bottom. Table 2d shows
the sequences represented by SEQ ID NOs: 47-57 in number order from top to
bottom. The last line of the tables summarizes, with the aid of symbols,
the degree of homology and therefore the degree of conservation observed.
The symbol "*" indicates a position of the alignment where the same
residue is present in all the sequences, the symbol ":" indicates a
position in the alignment where the amino acids present in the various
sequences are very similar, the symbol "." indicates a position in the
alignment where the amino acids present in the various sequences are
similar, and the absence of a symbol indicates a position in the alignment
where the amino acids present in the various sequences are not very
similar. This symbolic system is used by the Clustal W alignment program
(version 1.7).
The definition of the method of the invention makes reference to the
target cells of a virus which are the cells into which the virus is
capable of penetrating. The target cells of retroviruses are generally
known. Viruses have the property of binding to the cells which they are
capable of infecting. It is therefore optionally possible to test for,
using routine experiments in vitro, the target cells of a virus studied.
The definition of the method of the invention also makes reference to the
cells of the host having a membrane receptor for a protein of the host.
The cells of the host which have a receptor for a protein of said host are
often known and, in the opposite case, it is possible, using routine
experiments, to determine if a given protein binds to a certain type of
cell. It is possible, for example, to use a radiolabelled protein and to
determine if it binds to said cell type. It is also possible to test if
the protein binds to a given membrane receptor using a cell line
transfected with a gene expressing said membrane receptor.
The proteins of the host for which certain cells of the host possess a
membrane receptor are mainly proteins belonging to the range of soluble
protein mediators. This range includes proteins called, depending on the
cases, hormones, growth factors or cytokines, although there is no
distinct boundary between these various categories of mediators; see for
example CAVAILLON J. M., Les Cytokines (Masson, Paris, 1996) Chapter 1,
pages 1-3 and preface.
In the present application, it is considered that an immune response, for
example an antibody response, obtained by immunization with the aid of the
modified polypeptide prepared in accordance with the method of the
invention, is directed against the viral envelope protein and not against
the protein of the host, when the antibodies obtained have affinities for
the protein of the host and for the envelope protein of the retrovirus
which exhibit a substantial difference, resulting in particular in
differences in reactivity which are considered to be very significant in
ELISA tests, such as for example optical densities in a ratio of about 4
(or more), which means that the optical density observed after attachment
of said antibodies to the viral protein is at least four times higher than
that observed for the attachment of said antibodies to the protein of the
host. Similarly, a cellular type immune response is considered to be
directed against the envelope protein but not against the protein of the
host when the immunization in vitro of immunocompetent cells of the host
with the candidate vaccine induces the formation of activated cells whose
reaction toward cells (including transfected cell lines) expressing the
retroviral envelope protein is significantly higher than the reaction
toward cells expressing the protein of the host, for example when, in the
final optical measurement, or in the final radioactivity counting (in
particular .sup.51Cr radioactivity released by target cells) of the test
used, or alternatively in the assessment by any known means of a cell
lysis caused by induced cytotoxic cells, the scales of response are in a
ratio of about 4 (or more). The criteria which have just been indicated
make it possible at least to make a first choice among the modified
peptides studied, but in the final analysis, it is the absence or the
decrease in the pathogenic effect due to the suppression or the weakening
(demonstrated by any appropriate means) of the immune response toward the
protein of the host which will constitute the criterion for selection of
the modified peptides capable of constituting satisfactory vaccine agents.
The immunodominant and conserved regions of which it is desired to modify
the antigenicity, in accordance with the invention, may be chosen from
those which give in vitro a cross-reaction, of the B type and/or of the T
type, with the host protein defined above.
It is also possible to choose such an immunodominant and conserved region
from those for which a three-dimensional structural analogy with a region
of said protein of the host has been determined beforehand, said
structural analogy being capable of being associated with a cross-reaction
in vitro and/or in vivo. The three-dimensional structural analogy between
certain regions of two proteins refers to equivalent arrangements, in
space, of amino acid residues which are similar because, in particular, of
their side chain and/or of their analogous functional chemical groups. The
three-dimensional structures of the proteins can be obtained with the aid
of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra and/or of X-ray diffraction
spectra. For example, the structure of the SIV gp41 protein was obtained
with the aid of the NMR spectrum (Caffrey M. et al., J. Mol. Biol. 271,
819-826, 1997). In addition, it is possible, in some cases, to obtain a
good model with the aid of molecular modeling techniques, from the atomic
coordinates of a protein of known structure. It is possible to use for
that, in particular, the molecular modeling software X-plor (reference: "A
system for X-ray crystallography and NMR, Version 3.1", Axel T. Brunger,
Yale University Press, 1992).
To search for a three-dimensional structural analogy, it is possible to
use, for example, the known methods of visualization and superposition on
a graphic screen of the three-dimensional structure of biological
molecules. Software exists which allows the visualization of the
three-dimensional structures of the molecules with different modes of
representation, the calculation of the geometric parameters (such as
distances, angles and the like) and the objective and quantitative
superposition of several molecular structures (in particular RASMOL
software: Sayle, R. A. and Milner-White E. J., J. Mol. Biol., 247,
536-540, 1995 and ANTHEPROT software: Geourjon C. and Deleage G., J. Mol.
Graph. 13, 209-212, 1995) as well as the estimation of the accessibility
to solvents (X-plor software, already mentioned, and CCP4 software:
Collaborative Computational Project Number 4, Acta Cryst., D50, 760-763,
1994.
However, in order to have a finer estimation of these structural
analogies, it is useful to consider, at the level of each amino acid, the
functional groups positioned in a similar manner in both proteins which
are compared. For that, the co-inventors of the present invention use
methods which make it possible to calculate molecular surface areas with
the aim of comparing functional properties between two three-dimensional
structures, in order to take into account, not amino acids in their
entirety, but also, more particularly, functional chemical groups of each
of them (for example: amide, carboxyl, hydroxyl, sulfhydryl and amine
functions and the like). It is thus possible to take into consideration,
in the structures compared, functionally analogous amino acids, and not
only identical amino acids.
It is therefore considered that a region of a retroviral protein exhibits
a three-dimensional structural analogy with a given region of a protein of
the host when the techniques which have just been mentioned make it
possible to demonstrate, in the two regions compared, a similar spatial
organization of certain identical or functionally analogous amino acids.
It should be noted that amino acids which are functionally analogous and
grouped together in a similar manner in space can be relatively distant
from each other in the same peptide chain. However, the three-dimensional
structural analogy between two proteins which are being compared can also
relate to the spatial arrangement, in a similar manner, of identical or
functionally analogous amino acids in the case where, one of the proteins
being oligomerized, the amino acid residues involved are situated on
different chains of the oligomer, whereas the amino acid residues of the
other protein which are involved in this analogy can be situated on the
same peptide chain of this other protein.
It is particularly advisable to search for three-dimensional structural
analogies and/or cross-reactions with regions of the protein of the host
which are involved in the attachment of said protein to its receptor.
Among the proteins of the host which are mentioned in the definition of
the method of the invention, there may be mentioned in particular the
soluble mediators as defined above. Taking into account the remark made
above that immunosuppressive effects are generally associated with
retroviral infections, it is particularly important to search for
structural analogies and/or for cross-reactions between an outer protein
of a retrovirus and soluble protein mediators of the immune system. Among
these immune system mediators, there may be mentioned cytokines, and in
particular interleukin-2, interleukin-10, interleukin-15 as well as
interleukin-8 and chemokines.
To prepare the modified polypeptide which constitutes the vaccine agent
obtained according to the invention, it is possible to use known methods
of peptide synthesis or genetic engineering techniques. It is possible to
isolate or to prepare a polynucleotide sequence encoding at least part of
the envelope protein of the virus and, if desired, it is possible to
introduce at this stage, into the nucleotide sequence, mutations which
make it possible to obtain a mutated product of translation which
constitutes the modified polypeptide. It is also possible to directly
synthesize a modified polynucleotide sequence comprising one or more
mutations and encoding the modified polypeptide. The mutated
polynucleotide sequences thus obtained are introduced in a known manner
into an appropriate vector which makes it possible to express said
polypeptide, optionally in modified form. Such a vector is for example E.
coli, a baculovirus or a mammalian cell. It is also possible to carry out
the mutation on an unmodified polypeptide obtained according to one of the
preceding methods.
In the present application, "mutation" refers to any modification of a
region (optionally reduced to a single amino acid residue) of a
polypeptide, by physical means, chemical means (covalent or noncovalent
modification) and/or biological means (mutations by substitution, deletion
and/or insertion of one or more amino acids), leading to the modification
of the functional potentials of the constituent amino acid(s) of said
region, termed "mutated region". By way of example, it is possible to
carry out mutations leading to the abolition, acquisition and/or
modulation of the properties of disulfide bridges, hydrogen bonds,
electrostatic interactions and/or hydrophobic interactions, the
modification of the capacity of a protein to form a heterocomplex, or
alternatively, in the case of an oligomeric protein, the modification of
the state of oligomerization or of the stability of the oligomer.
The modification of an amino acid a of a polypeptide chain (including the
modification of a terminal amino acid of the polypeptide considered) can
influence the conformation of the neighboring amino acids in the chain,
including, as was recalled above, the conformation of an amino acid b
separated from a by a number of amino acid residues which may be as high
as seven or eight, and when the amino acid b is part of an epitope, any
modification of the amino acid a (in particular any addition of a
substituent or any modification of a substituent) is capable of modifying
the antigenicity of the epitope considered.
In the phase for searching for modified polypeptides in accordance with
the invention, the choice of the amino acids to be mutated and/or the
choice of the mutation methods can be made in an arbitrary manner or in a
reasoned manner. It is possible to use in particular at least one of the
following methods of modification: 1) the replacement of one or more amino
acids having a hydrophobic side chain (examples: Ala, Leu, Val, Ile, Phe,
Trp, Met, Tyr, Cys) by one or more amino acids having a hydrophilic side
chain (examples: Arg, Asp, Asn, Glu, Gln, Ser, Thr, His, Lys) or an
indifferent chain (examples: Gly, Pro) and vice versa; 2) the replacement
of one or more amino acids having a positively charged side chain
(examples: Arg, Lys, His) by one or more amino acids having a negatively
charged side chain (examples: Asp, Glu) or a neutral chain and vice versa;
3) the acquisition, suppression and/or modification of one or more
disulfide bridges; 4) the production of mimotopes, in particular which are
obtained by retro-inversion; 5) the substitutions, suppressions, additions
and/or other modifications of at least one amino acid which is potentially
a donor or acceptor of hydrogen bonds; 6) the substitutions, suppressions,
additions and/or other modifications of at least one amino acid which is
potentially a donor or acceptor of ionic bonds; 7) the change in steric
hindrance by substitutions, suppressions, additions and/or other
modifications of one or more amino acids; 8) the use of amino acids which
are not naturally present in proteins; 9) the modification of
glycosylation (creation, suppression or modification of glycosylation
sites or of their associated sugars).
Of course, the modified polypeptides thus obtained are tested, as
indicated above, in order to select the modified polypeptides which induce
an immune response directed against the envelope protein and not against
the protein of the host.
The method of the invention may be applied to the obtaining of vaccines,
in particular against the following viruses: HIV, FIV, SIV, leukomogenic
oncoviruses (avian, murine, feline, human, simian and bovine leukemia
viruses, that is to say, respectively, ALV, MULV, FELV, HTLV, STLV, BLV),
primate type D retroviruses, mammary tumor-inducing type B retroviruses,
Rous sarcoma virus, maedi-visna virus (infecting sheep), feline sarcoma
virus, avian myelocytomatosis virus and avian myeloblastosis virus.
The subject of the invention is also the use of a modified polypeptide, as
defined above, in the preparation of a vaccine composition for preventing
the pathogenic effects related to the infection of a host by a retrovirus.
The invention also relates to a vaccine composition which can be obtained
by the method of the invention, and containing as active ingredient a
modified polypeptide as described above. Such a composition may be used in
a method of vaccination for preventing the pathogenic effects of
retrovirus infections, this method essentially consisting in administering
to a vertebrate animal, including a human, a modified polypeptide as
defined above in a sufficient quantity to obtain a vaccination effect. The
formulation of the vaccine compositions, and their method of
administration, are known per se and will not be further described here.
The subject of the invention is also a modified retroviral polynucleotide
encoding a modified polypeptide as defined above. The modified
polynucleotide may be obtained as indicated above. The invention extends
to an expression vector into which said modified polynucleotide has been
inserted, said expression vector being thus capable of expressing the
modified polypeptide.
The modified polypeptide obtained according to the invention can also
serve as immunogenic agent in order to induce, by immunization, the
formation of antibodies which can be used in particular in the treatment
of retroviral infections, and the invention therefore also relates to the
antibodies obtained in response to the immunization of animals (including
humans), in vivo or in vitro, with the aid of the vaccine agent containing
a modified polypeptide described above. The antibodies of the invention
are in particular purified polyclonal antibodies or monoclonal antibodies
exhibiting the characteristic of recognizing the retroviral envelope
protein without recognizing the protein of the host. The purification of
the polyclonal antibodies, and the selection of the monoclonal antibodies,
can be carried out with the aid of the viral protein and of the protein of
the host, so as to select only the antibodies which recognize the viral
protein and not the protein of the host. The antibodies of the invention
can be used in particular in the early treatment of infections caused in
said host by the retrovirus against which they are directed. The dosage is
the usual dosage for antibodies. The pharmaceutical compositions
containing such antibodies also constitute one of the subjects of the
invention.
Claim 1 of 1 Claim
1. A polynucleotide encoding a
polypeptide comprising a peptide sequence selected from the group
consisting of SEQ ID NOs: 99 and 100. ____________________________________________
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