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  • PPP Year 3, Lee Multivalent Display of HPV Antigens using Self-Assembling Peptides

Pilot Project, Year 3

Multivalent Display of HPV Antigens using Self-Assembling Peptides

Since the introduction of the first HPV vaccine in 2006, the prevalence of certain HPV types declined among women from the general population aged 14-24 years. The currently available HPV vaccine (Gardasil® 9) was developed using virus-like particles (VLPs). It prevents against nine of the over 150 HPV types; two that cause warts (types 6, 11) and seven that can cause cancer (types 16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, and 58). While effective, the HPV vaccine has certain limitations.

For example, they require extensive purification protocols, two doses, and refrigeration. Therefore, research efforts continue to strive toward finding next-generation vaccines that have strong immunogenicity and are cost-effective.

Recently, short synthetic self-assembled peptides showed promise as a vaccine platform. These peptides, similar to VLPs, spontaneously assemble into stable ordered amyloid-like fibrils. Unlike VLPs, the fibrils are extremely robust at varying temperatures, pH, and solvents. The self-assembled fibrils are also significantly larger than the small spherical VLPs. Thus, the fibrils allow for potential increased immunogenicity and cost-effectiveness.

We hypothesized that self-assembled fibrils displaying HPV antigens produce strong immune responses due to the geometrical and multivalent display of peptide antigens along the fibril.

To test this hypothesis, we synthesized previously identified HPV antigens that will be chemically conjugated to the self-assembling peptides fibrils. Immune responses were assessed using a common murine model. Potential vaccine candidates will be further assessed via an HPV challenge model in mice.

Funding: The study is funded by NIMHD/NIH U54MD012388


About the investigator

Naomi Lee, PhD

Principal Investigator
Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
Email: Naomi.Lee@nau.edu

Crystal Morales

Doctoral student at the University of Arizona
American Indian Science and Engineering Society Conference – Third Place Graduate Research Oral Presentation Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS) Travel Scholarship (2020, 2021) Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP) awardee and mentor Graduate Student of the month Oct 2020 Outstanding Hispanic Graduate Student (2021)

Claira Sohn, PhD

Doctoral student at the University of Texas, San Antonio
Louis Stokes Alliances for Minority Participation (LSAMP) awardee and mentor

 

Publications Accordion Closed

Tier 1
Jones, C. W.; Morales, C. G.; Eltiste, S. L.; Yanchik-Slade, F. E.; Lee, N. R.; Nilsson, B. L., Capacity for increased surface area in the hydrophobic core of beta-sheet peptide bilayer nanoribbons. J Pept Sci 2021, e3334.

Tier 2
Chow-Garcia, N.; Lee, N. R.; Svhila, V.; Sohn, C.; Willie, S.; Holsti, M.; Wandinger-Ness, A., Cultural identity central to Native American persistence in science. Cultural Studies of Science Education 2022, 17, 557-588.

Conferences Accordion Closed

Media Accordion Closed

Southwest Health Engagement and Research Collaborative
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Room 120 Building 56
Applied Research & Development
1395 S Knoles Dr.
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
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Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
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SHERC@nau.edu
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928-523-5068
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