Designing an immunoinformatic vaccine for peri-implantitis using a structural biology approach

  • Pradeep Kumar Yadalam
  • , Santhiya Rengaraj
  • , Maryam H. Mugri
  • , Mohammed Sayed
  • , Amit Porwal
  • , Nasser Mesfer Alahmari
  • , Khaled M. Alzahrani
  • , Ali Robaian
  • , Hosam Ali Baeshen
  • , Shankargouda Patil

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives: Peri-implantitis is a destructive inflammatory process that affects the soft and hard tissues around dental implants. porphyromonas gingivalis, an anaerobic gram-negative bacterium, appears to be the main culprit. Since there is no efficient and specific vaccine to treat peri-implantitis, the goal of our research has been to develop a multi-epitope vaccination utilizing an immunoinformatics approach that targeted P. gingivalis type I fim A. Materials and methods: P. gingivalis peptides 6JKZ and 6KMF are suitable for vaccine development. B- and T-cell epitopes from 6KMF and 6JKZ were detected and evaluated based on critical factors to produce a multi-epitope vaccine construct. It was assessed based on allergenicity, antigenicity, stability. The vaccine's dual major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I and MHC-II) binding epitopes allowed it to reach a larger population. P. gingivalis fimbriae induce immune subversion through TLR -CXCR4 receptor complex pathway. The ClusPro 2.0 server was used to do the molecular docking using TLR2 - CXCR4 and vaccine epitopes as receptor and ligand respectively. Results: The designed vaccine was non-allergenic and had a high antigenicity, solubility, and stability. The 3D structure of the vaccine revealed strong interaction with CXCR4(TLR2) using molecular docking. The vaccine-CXCR4 interface was more consistent, possibly because the vaccination has a higher affinity for the CXCR4-TLR2 complex. Conclusion: This study details the vaccine's distinct and sustained interaction with the CXCR4(TLR2) immunological receptor and its consistent and effective utterance in the bacterial system. As a result, our vaccine formulation will evoke a significant memory response and induce an adaptive immune response against P. gingivalis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)622-629
Number of pages8
JournalSaudi Journal of Biological Sciences
Volume29
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • CXCR4
  • Immunoinformatics approach
  • Multi-epitope vaccine
  • Peri-implantitis
  • Porphyromonas gingivalis

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