Symposium Speaker 21st Lancefield International Symposium for Streptococci and Streptococcal Diseases 2022

Multivalent M-protein based vaccines (#35)

James Dale 1
  1. Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN, United States

4Academic Children’s Hospital Queen Fabiola, Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium

5Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

Background: Multivalent vaccines containing N-terminal M peptides elicit opsonic antibodies which are associated with protection. A perceived limitation of M peptide vaccines is reduced coverage in some geographic regions. Previous studies have shown that there is significant immunological cross-reactivity among sequence-related M proteins. In the present study, we have used a three-tiered structure-based algorithm to identify M peptides most likely to generate antibodies cross-reactive with heterologous M types to incorporate into a multivalent vaccine predicted to have broad global coverage.    

Methods: Vaccine design was based on the analysis of 117 N-terminal 50aa M peptides from Strep A with the highest global prevalence. We used a combination of peptide sequence identity, heptad sequence homology, and coiled-coil propensity in a comprehensive pairwise analysis to select peptides predicted to contain cross-protective epitopes.

Results: Based on the in-silico analysis of predicted cross-reactivity, together with the updated global prevalence of M types, we selected 19 vaccine M peptides predicted to cross-react with 37 non-vaccine M types, to which were added 13 type-specific M peptides. The new 32-valent vaccine could theoretically achieve 78% global coverage of Strep A infections with regional coverage ranging from 63-92%. Rabbits immunized with the vaccine developed significant levels of antibodies (>8-fold) against 31/32 vaccine M peptides and 28/37 non-vaccine M peptides. Analysis of functional OPK activity is on-going.  

Conclusions: Structure-based assessment of M peptides guided by results of antibody cross-reactivity when combined with global Strep A M type prevalence could result in a broadly protective multivalent M protein-based vaccine.