Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
The collectins are a group of serum and pulmonary surfactant-associated
proteins which are believed to participate in antibody-independent host
defenses. The pulmonary collectins, surfactant proteins A and D (SP-A
and SP-D), have antiviral and antibacterial properties. However,
preliminary research has indicated that genetically altered versions of
these proteins produced by molecular biological techniques would be
likely to have enhanced activity against specific respiratory pathogens.
The goal of this proposal is to generate recombinant, mutant collectins
with improved activity against influenza A viruses (IAVs) and
Streptococcus Pneumoniae (pneumococci) as compared to the wild type
collectins. These pathogens are chosen because they represent
individually major causes of serious respiratory infection, and because
superinfection with pneumococci is an important complication of IAV
infection. We have produced a chimeric collectin which incorporates the
N-terminus and collagen domain of SP-D fused with the carbohydrate
recognition domain (CRD) of conglutinin. This molecule has a greater
ability to agglutinate IAV and bacteria than native or recombinant
conglutinin, as well as greater ability to inhibit IAV hemagglutination
activity than either conglutinin or wild type SP-D. Based on these
promising findings we propose construction of several other chimeric
collectins with the goals of combining favorable functional properties
of the wild type collectins into single molecules. Two further
constructs containing the N-terminus and collagen domain of SP-D fused
to the CRDs of either SP-A or the serum collectin, mannose-binding
lectin (MBL), will be made. Since it is likely that the collagen domain
of SP-A participates in binding to phagocyte receptors another chimeric
construct will contain this domain of SP-A and the CRD of SP-D (or MBL).
We will compare the ability of these recombinant collectins to bind to,
aggregate, inhibit infectivity of, and act as opsonins for, a panel of
clinically important IAV and pneumococcal strains. Next, specific
residues involved in carbohydrate binding will be mutated in one of the
constructs to determine if binding to IAV or pneumococci can be
enhanced. In vivo activity of the collectin constructs will initially
be tested by instilling them intranasally in mice prior to IAV or
pneumococcal infection. One of the mutant constructs (chosen for
optimal activity against IAV and/or pneumococci) will then be expressed
in the airway of transgenic mice to determine if in vivo resistance to
infection is enhanced. These experiments should yield important
insights into basic collection biology and demonstrate that enhancement
of collectin-mediated pulmonary host defense can be achieved in vivo
through rational alteration of wild type collectins.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01HL058910-02
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