Impact of Protein Glycosylation on the Design of Viral Vaccines
- PMID: 32935143
- DOI: 10.1007/10_2020_132
Impact of Protein Glycosylation on the Design of Viral Vaccines
Abstract
Glycans play crucial roles in various biological processes such as cell proliferation, cell-cell interactions, and immune responses. Since viruses co-opt cellular biosynthetic pathways, viral glycosylation mainly depends on the host cell glycosylation machinery. Consequently, several viruses exploit the cellular glycosylation pathway to their advantage. It was shown that viral glycosylation is strongly dependent on the host system selected for virus propagation and/or protein expression. Therefore, the use of different expression systems results in various glycoforms of viral glycoproteins that may differ in functional properties. These differences clearly illustrate that the choice of the expression system can be important, as the resulting glycosylation may influence immunological properties. In this review, we will first detail protein N- and O-glycosylation pathways and the resulting glycosylation patterns; we will then discuss different aspects of viral glycosylation in pathogenesis and in vaccine development; and finally, we will elaborate on how to harness viral glycosylation in order to optimize the design of viral vaccines. To this end, we will highlight specific examples to demonstrate how glycoengineering approaches and exploitation of different expression systems could pave the way towards better self-adjuvanted glycan-based viral vaccines.
Keywords: Glycoengineering; Immunity; Lectins; N-Glycosylation; O-Glycosylation; Vaccine; Virus.
© 2020. Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
References
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- Varki A, Gagneux P (2015) Chapter 7 – Biological functions of glycans. In: Varki A, Cummings RD, Esko JD et al (eds) Essentials of glycobiology, 3rd edn. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, pp 77–88
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- Watanabe Y, Bowden TA, Wilson IA et al (2019) Exploitation of glycosylation in enveloped virus pathobiology. Biochim Biophys Acta 1863(10):1480–1497 - DOI
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