Neutralising immunogenicity of a polyepitope antigen expressed in a transgenic food plant: A novel antigen to protect against measles

Fabienne B. Bouche, Estelle Marquet-Blouin, Yusuke Yanagi, Andre Steinmetz, Claude P. Muller*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

45 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Transgenic carrot plants were developed expressing a designer polyepitope combining tandem repeats of a protective loop-forming B cell epitope (H386-400) of the measles virus hemagglutinin protein with a human promiscuous, measles-unrelated T cell epitope (tt830-844). Despite the sensitivity of the loop conformation to its molecular environment, proper folding was confirmed by conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies. The antibodies also reacted with the boiled antigen in Western blot. Immunisation of mice peritoneally with carrot plant extracts induced high titers of antibodies that crossreacted strongly with the virus. Furthermore, the sera neutralised field isolates of different geographic origins and genotypes in a modified plaque reduction neutralisation assay performed on CD150-transfected Vero cells. These results demonstrate that transgenic carrot plants can serve as an efficient expression system to produce highly immunogenic, randomly assembled polyepitope antigens. The combined features of the selected epitopes and the potential of the plant expression system may pave the way towards new vaccines against measles.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2065-2072
Number of pages8
JournalVaccine
Volume21
Issue number17-18
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 May 2003
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Polyepitope
  • Transgenic carrots
  • Vero-SLAM

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