학술논문

In Silico Design and Evaluation of PRAME+FliCΔD2D3 as a New Breast Cancer Vaccine Candidate
Document Type
article
Source
Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences, Vol 46, Iss 1, Pp 52-60 (2021)
Subject
prame antigen
vaccines
breast neoplasms
computer simulation
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Language
English
ISSN
0253-0716
1735-3688
Abstract
Background: The most prevalent cancer in women over the world is breast cancer. Immunotherapy is a promising method to effectively treat cancer patients. Among various immunotherapy methods, tumor antigens stimulate the immune system to eradicate cancer cells. Preferentially expressed antigen in melanoma (PRAME) is mainly overexpressed in breast cancer cells, and has no expression in normal tissues. FliCΔD2D3, as truncated flagellin (FliC), is an effective toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) agonist with lower inflammatory responses. The objective of the present study was to utilize bioinformatics methods to design a chimeric protein against breast cancer.Methods: The physicochemical properties, solubility, and secondary structures of PRAME+FliCΔD2D3 were predicted using the tools ProtParam, Protein-sol, and GOR IV, respectively. The 3D structure of the chimeric protein was built using I-TASSER and refined with GalaxyRefine, RAMPAGE, and PROCHECK. ANTIGENpro and VaxiJen were used to evaluate protein antigenicity, and allergenicity was checked using AlgPred and Allergen FP. Major histocompatibility complex )MHC( and cytotoxic T-lymphocytes )CTL( binding peptides were predicted using HLApred and CTLpred. Finally, B-cell continuous and discontinuous epitopes were predicted using ABCpred and ElliPro, respectively.Results: The stability and solubility of PRAME+FliCΔD2D3 were analyzed, and its secondary and tertiary structures were predicted. The results showed that the derived peptides could bind to MHCs and CTLs. The designed chimeric protein possessed both linear and conformational epitopes with a high binding affinity to B-cell epitopes. Conclusion: PRAME+FliCΔD2D3 is a stable and soluble chimeric protein that can stimulate humoral and cellular immunity. The obtained results can be utilized for the development of an experimental vaccine against breast cancer.