Engineering human IL-18 with increased bioactivity and bioavailability |
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Authors: | Swencki-Underwood Bethany Cunningham Mark R Heavner George A Blasie Cheryl McCarthy Stephen G Dougherty Tara Brigham-Burke Mike Gunn George R Goletz Theresa J Snyder Linda A |
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Affiliation: | Centocor Inc., Biopharmaceutical Research, 145 King of Prussia Road, Radnor, PA 19087, USA. bswenck2@cntus.jnj.com |
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Abstract: | Cytokines in plasmid form can act as potent adjuvants when co-administered with DNA vaccines, resulting in an enhanced immune response to the DNA-encoded antigen. This is true of interleukin-18 (IL-18), which has been shown to serve as an adjuvant in conjunction with certain DNA vaccines. To determine if the properties of IL-18 could be optimized for use as a DNA vaccine adjuvant, a model of IL-18/IL-18R binding was developed to identify variants of human IL-18 that were predicted to improve receptor interactions and potentially bioactivity. The linkage of mature IL-18 to a secretion signal sequence provided improved protein expression from mammalian cells and signal peptidase cleavage of this protein produced the authentic N-terminus. The IL-18 variant proteins secreted this way were bioactive, as demonstrated by their ability to induce interferon gamma (IFNgamma) expression by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and to bind to IL-18R, as demonstrated by BIAcore analysis. The IL-18 variants were inhibited by IL-18 binding protein (IL-18BP), the soluble inhibitor of IL-18, as measured by neutralization of the IFNgamma response in PBMCs. One variant, V11I/T63A, demonstrated increases both in bioactivity and mammalian cell expression as compared to native IL-18, indicating that this molecule may be particularly well suited for use as a DNA-encoded vaccine adjuvant. |
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