Design of an Epitope-Based Peptide Vaccine against the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2): A Vaccine-informatics Approach
Abstract
The recurrent and recent global outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 has turned into a global concern which has infected more than 19-million people all over the globe, and this number is increasing in hours. Unfortunate no vaccine or specific treatment is available, which make it more deadly. A vaccine-informatics approach has shown significant breakthrough in peptide-based epitope mapping and opens the new horizon in vaccine development. In this study, we have identified a total of 15 antigenic peptides (including T and B cells) in the surface glycoprotein of SARS-CoV-2 which showed non-toxic nature, non-allergenic, highly antigenic and non-mutated in other SARS-CoV-2 virus strains. The population coverage analysis has found that CD4+T-cell peptides showed higher cumulative population coverage over to CD8+peptides in the 16 different geographical regions of the world. We identified twelve peptides(LTDEMIAQY, WTAGAAAYY, WMESEFRVY, IRASANLAA, FGAISSVLN, VKQLSSNFG, FAMQMAYRF, FGAGAALQI, YGFQPTNGVGYQ, LPDPSKPSKR, QTQTNSPRRARS and VITPGTNTSN) that are 80% - 90% identical with experimentally determined epitopes of SARS-CoV, and this will likely be beneficial for a quick progression of the vaccine design. Moreover, docking analysis suggested that identified peptides are tightly bound in the groove of HLA molecules which can induce the T-cell response. Overall this study allows us to determine potent peptide antigen targets in surface glycoprotein on intuitive grounds which open up a new horizon in COVID-19 research. However, this study needs experimental validation by in vitro and in vivo.
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