Multivalent display of minimal Clostridium difficile glycan epitopes mimics antigenic properties of larger glycans

  • Felix Broecker
  • , Jonas Hanske
  • , Christopher E. Martin
  • , Ju Yuel Baek
  • , Annette Wahlbrink
  • , Felix Wojcik
  • , Laura Hartmann
  • , Christoph Rademacher
  • , Chakkumkal Anish
  • , Peter H. Seeberger

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

69 Scopus citations

Abstract

Synthetic cell-surface glycans are promising vaccine candidates against Clostridium difficile. The complexity of large, highly antigenic and immunogenic glycans is a synthetic challenge. Less complex antigens providing similar immune responses are desirable for vaccine development. Based on molecular-level glycan-antibody interaction analyses, we here demonstrate that the C. difficile surface polysaccharide-I (PS-I) can be resembled by multivalent display of minimal disaccharide epitopes on a synthetic scaffold that does not participate in binding. We show that antibody avidity as a measure of antigenicity increases by about five orders of magnitude when disaccharides are compared with constructs containing five disaccharides. The synthetic, pentavalent vaccine candidate containing a peptide T-cell epitope elicits weak but highly specific antibody responses to larger PS-I glycans in mice. This study highlights the potential of multivalently displaying small oligosaccharides to achieve antigenicity characteristic of larger glycans. The approach may result in more cost-efficient carbohydrate vaccines with reduced synthetic effort.

Original languageEnglish
Article number11224
JournalNature Communications
Volume7
DOIs
StatePublished - 19 Apr 2016
Externally publishedYes

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