International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2019)

Computational Analysis of Dengue Virus Envelope Protein (E) Reveals an Epitope with Flavivirus Immunodiagnostic Potential in Peptide Microarrays

  • Greta Bergamaschi,
  • Enrico M. A. Fassi,
  • Alessandro Romanato,
  • Ilda D'Annessa,
  • Maria Teresa Odinolfi,
  • Dario Brambilla,
  • Francesco Damin,
  • Marcella Chiari,
  • Alessandro Gori,
  • Giorgio Colombo,
  • Marina Cretich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20081921
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 8
p. 1921

Abstract

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The mosquito-borne viral disease caused by the Dengue virus is an expanding global threat. Diagnosis in low-resource-settings and epidemiological surveillance urgently requires new immunoprobes for serological tests. Structure-based epitope prediction is an efficient method to design diagnostic peptidic probes able to reveal specific antibodies elicited in response to infections in patients’ sera. In this study, we focused on the Dengue viral envelope protein (E); computational analyses ranging from extensive Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations and energy-decomposition-based prediction of potentially immunoreactive regions identified putative epitope sequences. Interestingly, one such epitope showed internal dynamic and energetic properties markedly different from those of other predicted sequences. The epitope was thus synthesized as a linear peptide, modified for chemoselective immobilization on microarrays and used in a serological assay to discriminate Dengue-infected individuals from healthy controls. The synthetic epitope probe showed a diagnostic performance comparable to that of the full antigen in terms of specificity and sensitivity. Given the high level of sequence identity among different flaviviruses, the epitope was immune-reactive towards Zika-infected sera as well. The results are discussed in the context of the quest for new possible structure-dynamics-based rules for the prediction of the immunoreactivity of selected antigenic regions with potential pan-flavivirus immunodiagnostic capacity.

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