In-silico approach of Fusion Glycoprotein (F) targeted multi-epitope vaccine against Human Respiratory Syncytial Virus (HRSV)
Abstract
"This work created a multi-epitope respiratory syncytial virus vaccine in-silico and simulated
its biochemical effectiveness. In-silico investigation selected fusion glycoprotein (F) from
envelope proteins of RSV. F protein causes virion-target cell membrane fusion. However, in-silico methodology used several servers, databases, and software such as Vaxijen v2.0 for antigenicity, NetCTL-1.2, NetMHCIIpan 4.0, and Bepipred servers, which were utilized to find epitopes recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), helper T lymphocytes (HTLs), and B cells. IFNepitope, IL-4Pred, and IL-10Pred were used to identify epitopes expressed by
HTLs. Linkers were used to connect epitopes. Positive findings were found in biochemical
analysis of the final proposed vaccine. Positive outcomes were predicted for a range of
indicators, including instability index (38.99 as stable), GRAVY score (-0.180), molecular
weight (91876.78 dalton), toxicity, antigenicity (0.5810), and allergenicity. Furthermore,
acceptable z-score (-9.89) and Ramachandran plot (94.95%) were obtained for the final
proposed vaccine via ProSAweb and SWISS-MODEL, respectively. The required outcome was
also achieved by homology modeling, molecular docking, and immune response simulation
via responsible servers. However, in-silico vaccine discovery for RSV and other diseases may be accelerated"