Author
Listed:
- Tianyi Qiu
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University
Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University)
- Yiyan Yang
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Jingxuan Qiu
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Yang Huang
(Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University)
- Tianlei Xu
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University
Emory University)
- Han Xiao
(University of Helsinki)
- Dingfeng Wu
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Qingchen Zhang
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Chen Zhou
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Xiaoyan Zhang
(Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University)
- Kailin Tang
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
- Jianqing Xu
(Shanghai Medical School, Fudan University)
- Zhiwei Cao
(School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University)
Abstract
Major challenges in vaccine development include rapidly selecting or designing immunogens for raising cross-protective immunity against different intra- or inter-subtypic pathogens, especially for the newly emerging varieties. Here we propose a computational method, Conformational Epitope (CE)-BLAST, for calculating the antigenic similarity among different pathogens with stable and high performance, which is independent of the prior binding-assay information, unlike the currently available models that heavily rely on the historical experimental data. Tool validation incorporates influenza-related experimental data sufficient for stability and reliability determination. Application to dengue-related data demonstrates high harmonization between the computed clusters and the experimental serological data, undetectable by classical grouping. CE-BLAST identifies the potential cross-reactive epitope between the recent zika pathogen and the dengue virus, precisely corroborated by experimental data. The high performance of the pathogens without the experimental binding data suggests the potential utility of CE-BLAST to rapidly design cross-protective vaccines or promptly determine the efficacy of the currently marketed vaccine against emerging pathogens, which are the critical factors for containing emerging disease outbreaks.
Suggested Citation
Tianyi Qiu & Yiyan Yang & Jingxuan Qiu & Yang Huang & Tianlei Xu & Han Xiao & Dingfeng Wu & Qingchen Zhang & Chen Zhou & Xiaoyan Zhang & Kailin Tang & Jianqing Xu & Zhiwei Cao, 2018.
"CE-BLAST makes it possible to compute antigenic similarity for newly emerging pathogens,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-10, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-04171-2
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-04171-2
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