2 research outputs found
l‑Rhamnose Enhances the Immunogenicity of Melanoma-Associated Antigen A3 for Stimulating Antitumor Immune Responses
Vaccines
based on melanoma-associated antigens (MAGEs) present
a promising strategy for tumor immunotherapy, albeit with weak immunogenicity.
In this study, the xenoantigen l-rhamnose (Rha) was chemically
conjugated with truncated MAGE-A3 (tMAGE-A3) to generate Rha-tMAGE-A3.
The product showed good antigenicity with anti-Rha antibodies purified
from human serum. FITC-labeled Rha-tMAGE-A3 was detected in THP-1
human macrophage cells via the anti-Rha antibody-dependent antigen
uptake process. Furthermore, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)
stimulated with Rha-tMAGE-A3 in the presence of anti-Rha antibodies
showed better cytotoxicity toward A375 human melanoma cells surfaced
by MAGE-A3 antigen compared to PBMCs stimulated with tMAGE-A3. All
data reveal that linking of Rha epitopes to MAGE enhances the immunogenicity
of MAGE by harnessing the immune effector functions of human naturally
existing anti-Rha antibodies. Rha epitopes could become immunogenicity
enhancers of tumor associated antigens in the development of tumor
immunotherapies
Transforming Flask Reaction into Cell-Based Synthesis: Production of Polyhydroxylated Molecules via Engineered Escherichia coli
Dihydroxyacetone
phosphate (DHAP)-dependent aldolases have been
intensively studied and widely used in the synthesis of carbohydrates
and complex polyhydroxylated molecules. However, strict specificity
toward donor substrate DHAP greatly hampers their synthetic utility.
Here, we transformed DHAP-dependent aldolases-mediated by in vitro
reactions into bioengineered Escherichia coli (E. coli). Such flask-to-cell transformation
addressed several key issues plaguing in vitro enzymatic synthesis:
(1) it solves the problem of DHAP availability by in vivo-hijacking
DHAP from the glycolysis pathway of the bacterial system, (2) it circumvents
purification of recombinant aldolases and phosphatase, and (3) it
dephosphorylates the resultant aldol adducts in vivo, thus eliminating
the additional step for phosphate removal and achieving in vivo phosphate
recycling. The engineered E. coli strains
tolerate a wide variety of aldehydes as acceptor and provide a set
of biologically relevant polyhydroxylated molecules in gram scale