Immunological Medicine (Jan 2021)

Immunoinformatics design of multiepitopes peptide-based universal cancer vaccine using matrix metalloproteinase-9 protein as a target

  • Abdelrahman H. Abdelmoneim,
  • Mujahed I. Mustafa,
  • Miyssa I. Abdelmageed,
  • Naseem S. Murshed,
  • Enas dk. Dawoud,
  • Enas M. Ahmed,
  • Rahma M. Kamal Eldein,
  • Nafisa M. Elfadol,
  • Anfal Osama M. Sati,
  • Abdelrafie M. Makhawi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/25785826.2020.1794165
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 1
pp. 35 – 52

Abstract

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A new approach toward cancer therapy is the use of cancer vaccine, yet the different molecular bases of cancers, reduce the effectiveness of this approach. In this article, we aim to use matrix metalloproteinase-9 protein (MMP9) which is an essential molecule in the survival and metastasis of all types of cancers as a target for universal cancer vaccine design. The reference sequence of MMP9 protein was obtained from NCBI databases. Furthermore, the B-cell and T cell-related peptides were analyzed using the IEDB website and other related soft wares. The best candidate peptides were then visualized using chimera software. Three peptides were found to be good candidates for interactions with B cells (SLPE, RLYT, and PALPR), while 10 peptides were found as good targets for interactions with MHC1 and another 10 peptides founded suitable for interactions with MHC2 with population coverages of 94.77 and 90.67%, respectively. Finally, the immune response simulation and molecular docking were done using the C-IMMSIM simulator and AutoDock Vina to confirm the effectiveness of the proposed vaccine. By the end of this project: twenty-three peptide-based vaccine was designed for use as a universal cancer vaccine which has a high world population coverage for MHC1 (94.77%) and MHC2 (90.67%) related alleles.

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