An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein

This thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2020.

書誌詳細
第一著者: Rafsan, Rian
その他の著者: Siddique, Romana
フォーマット: 学位論文
言語:en_US
出版事項: Brac University 2021
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:http://dspace.bracu.ac.bd/xmlui/handle/10361/14440
id 10361-14440
record_format dspace
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language en_US
topic Vaccine development
SARS COV-2
Membrane Glycoprotein
spellingShingle Vaccine development
SARS COV-2
Membrane Glycoprotein
Rafsan, Rian
An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
description This thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2020.
author2 Siddique, Romana
author_facet Siddique, Romana
Rafsan, Rian
format Thesis
author Rafsan, Rian
author_sort Rafsan, Rian
title An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
title_short An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
title_full An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
title_fullStr An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
title_full_unstemmed An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein
title_sort in silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against sars cov-2 using membrane glycoprotein
publisher Brac University
publishDate 2021
url http://dspace.bracu.ac.bd/xmlui/handle/10361/14440
work_keys_str_mv AT rafsanrian aninsilicoapproachtomultiepitopesubunitvaccinedevelopmentagainstsarscov2usingmembraneglycoprotein
AT rafsanrian insilicoapproachtomultiepitopesubunitvaccinedevelopmentagainstsarscov2usingmembraneglycoprotein
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spelling 10361-144402021-05-29T21:01:24Z An in Silico approach to multi-epitope subunit vaccine development against SARS COV-2 using Membrane Glycoprotein Rafsan, Rian Siddique, Romana Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Brac University Vaccine development SARS COV-2 Membrane Glycoprotein This thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biotechnology 2020. Catalogued from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 82-87). SARS Cov -2, short for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 is a + sense zoonotic retrovirus of the Coronaviridae family and is genetically a mutant version of the SARS Cov and is the causal organism of the Covid-19 disease. First reported on the 31st of December, 2019 in the Wuhan, Hubei province of China the disease was soon declared a pandemic by the WHO on the 30th of January 2020. The virus itself is claimed to have originated from snakes, bats and pangolins as potential carriers in the ‘wet markets’ of Wuhan where live wild animals are sold for consumption under poor hygienic conditions. As such, the environment is ideal for viral growth and transmission particularly via faeces, blood, semen and other fluids of biological origin from the carriers.Patients of this disease are majorly symptomized by mild to moderate fever, runny nose, dried cough and tiredness along with respiratory arrest in extremely severe cases, particularly elderlies. Although medicinal drugs such as hydroxy-Chloroquine and Remdesivir are claimed to be potential therapeutic candidates against this virus , no credible vaccine has yet been successfully developed that can efficiently combat this disease. Here, we tried to develop a multi-epitope sub-unit vaccine against SARS Cov-2 using the membrane glycoprotein (M) as the primary antigen in our vaccine construct. Our choice of antigen was carried out based on two basic features ;(i)Antigenicity of the protein.(ii)Functionality of the protein.To measure the antigenicity of our proteins we used the Vaxijen 2.0 server.At a minimal threshold set to 0.5 , antigenicity of the potential protein candidates preliminarily selected were measured . A total of 12 proteins’ primary structures were primarily retrieved in FASTA format from NCBI website . Among the candidates were 10 non-structural proteins (nsp2-11) and 2 structural proteins - namely the Spike glycoprotein (S) & membrane glycoprotein (M) . The membrane glycoprotein (M) was selected for further analysis.CTL epitopes were then identified using NetCTL 1.2 server.CTL epitopes were analysed for MHC I allele specificity and HTL epitopes corresponding to MHC II alleles respectively using the respective IEDB servers . Unique epitopes were selected and epitopes that were mutually homologous or partially homologous were excluded.Linear B cell epitopes were identified specific to our primary antigen using Bepipred Linear Epitope Prediction 2.0 algorithm at a minimal threshold of 0.5.All the selected epitopes were then added 4 to the primary antigen using proper linkers to enhance stability of our vaccine . Biochemical analysis was done using the PROTPARAM tool. Next we built a PDB structure of our final vaccine using phyre2 server via homology modelling that was docked with the TLR8 receptor of toll-like receptor family.We further validated the credibility of our vaccine’s efficacy by carrying out an in silico simulation analysis using C-immsim server . We believe that the vaccine we developed will be a potential candidate to effectively combat SARS Cov-2 . We also believe that further in vitro analysis is required to get a clear understanding of this vaccine and its further development. Rian Rafsan B. Biotechnology 2021-05-29T08:57:22Z 2021-05-29T08:57:22Z 2020 2020 Thesis ID: 16336017 http://dspace.bracu.ac.bd/xmlui/handle/10361/14440 en_US Brac University theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. 87 pages application/pdf Brac University