Vaccines (Sep 2024)

Immunogenicity Analysis of Chikungunya Virus DNA Vaccine Based on Mutated Putative N-Linked Glycosylation Sites of the Envelope Protein

  • Kwangwook Kim,
  • Seo Young Moon,
  • Seungyeon Kim,
  • In-Ohk Ouh,
  • Yookyoung Lee,
  • Heeji Lim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12101097
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 1097

Abstract

Read online

Chikungunya fever is a mosquito-borne infectious disease caused by the chikungunya virus (CHIKV). Recently, CHIKV has spread rapidly worldwide, raising global concerns. However, there is only one approved vaccine is available to prevent CHIKV infection; therefore, different platform vaccines development is a public health priority. The CHIKV genome encodes four non-structural polyproteins (nsP1-4) and one structural polyprotein (capsid, envelope 3, envelope 2, 6 K, and envelope 1). Previous studies have shown that N-linked glycans in viral proteins play important roles in regulating immune responses. Accordingly, in this study, we designed four CHIKV DNA vaccine candidates with mutated N-glycosylation sites in the full-length E and E I/II proteins. Our results indicated that immunization of mice with the vaccine elevated the cytokines levels, including IFN-γ, associated with T cell immune response. Furthermore, the truncated E protein with a deleted E III domain (E I/II) exhibited better immunogenicity than the full-length E protein, and N-linked glycosylation of E I/II protein induced a higher cell-mediated immune response. Overall, our study demonstrates that N-linked glycosylation of the E I/II proteins of CHIKV significantly enhances cell-mediated immune responses, laying the foundation for the development of potential vaccination strategies against CHIKV.

Keywords