Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Natalie K. Connors is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Natalie K. Connors.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2014

Bioengineering virus-like particles as vaccines

Linda H.L. Lua; Natalie K. Connors; Frank Sainsbury; Yap P. Chuan; Nani Wibowo; Anton P. J. Middelberg

Virus‐like particle (VLP) technology seeks to harness the optimally tuned immunostimulatory properties of natural viruses while omitting the infectious trait. VLPs that assemble from a single protein have been shown to be safe and highly efficacious in humans, and highly profitable. VLPs emerging from basic research possess varying levels of complexity and comprise single or multiple proteins, with or without a lipid membrane. Complex VLP assembly is traditionally orchestrated within cells using black‐box approaches, which are appropriate when knowledge and control over assembly are limited. Recovery challenges including those of adherent and intracellular contaminants must then be addressed. Recent commercial VLPs variously incorporate steps that include VLP in vitro assembly to address these problems robustly, but at the expense of process complexity. Increasing research activity and translation opportunity necessitate bioengineering advances and new bioprocessing modalities for efficient and cost‐effective production of VLPs. Emerging approaches are necessarily multi‐scale and multi‐disciplinary, encompassing diverse fields from computational design of molecules to new macro‐scale purification materials. In this review, we highlight historical and emerging VLP vaccine approaches. We overview approaches that seek to specifically engineer a desirable immune response through modular VLP design, and those that seek to improve bioprocess efficiency through inhibition of intracellular assembly to allow optimal use of existing purification technologies prior to cell‐free VLP assembly. Greater understanding of VLP assembly and increased interdisciplinary activity will see enormous progress in VLP technology over the coming decade, driven by clear translational opportunity. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 425–440.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2013

Effects of pre-existing anti-carrier immunity and antigenic element multiplicity on efficacy of a modular virus-like particle vaccine

Yap P. Chuan; Tania Rivera-Hernandez; Nani Wibowo; Natalie K. Connors; Yang Wu; Fiona K. Hughes; Linda H.L. Lua; Anton P. J. Middelberg

Modularization of a peptide antigen for presentation on a microbially synthesized murine polyomavirus (MuPyV) virus‐like particle (VLP) offers a new alternative for rapid and low‐cost vaccine delivery at a global scale. In this approach, heterologous modules containing peptide antigenic elements are fused to and displayed on the VLP carrier, allowing enhancement of peptide immunogenicity via ordered and densely repeated presentation of the modules. This study addresses two key engineering questions pertaining to this platform, exploring the effects of (i) pre‐existing carrier‐specific immunity on modular VLP vaccine effectiveness and (ii) increase in the antigenic element number per VLP on peptide‐specific immune response. These effects were studied in a mouse model and with modular MuPyV VLPs presenting a group A streptococcus (GAS) peptide antigen, J8i. The data presented here demonstrate that immunization with a modular VLP could induce high levels of J8i‐specific antibodies despite a strong pre‐existing anti‐carrier immune response. Doubling of the J8i antigenic element number per VLP did not enhance J8i immunogenicity at a constant peptide dose. However, the strategy, when used in conjunction with increased VLP dose, could effectively increase the peptide dose up to 10‐fold, leading to a significantly higher J8i‐specific antibody titer. This study further supports feasibility of the MuPyV modular VLP vaccine platform by showing that, in the absence of adjuvant, modularized GAS antigenic peptide at a dose as low as 150 ng was sufficient to raise a high level of peptide‐specific IgGs indicative of bactericidal activity. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2013; 110:2343–2351.


Vaccine | 2013

Sensitivity of immune response quality to influenza helix 190 antigen structure displayed on a modular virus-like particle

Melisa R. Anggraeni; Natalie K. Connors; Yang Wu; Yap P. Chuan; Linda H.L. Lua; Anton P. J. Middelberg

Biomolecular engineering enables synthesis of improved proteins through synergistic fusion of modules from unrelated biomolecules. Modularization of peptide antigen from an unrelated pathogen for presentation on a modular virus-like particle (VLP) represents a new and promising approach to synthesize safe and efficacious vaccines. Addressing a key knowledge gap in modular VLP engineering, this study investigates the underlying fundamentals affecting the ability of induced antibodies to recognize the native pathogen. Specifically, this quality of immune response is correlated to the peptide antigen module structure. We modularized a helical peptide antigen element, helix 190 (H190) from the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) receptor binding region, for presentation on murine polyomavirus VLP, using two strategies aimed to promote H190 helicity on the VLP. In the first strategy, H190 was flanked by GCN4 structure-promoting elements within the antigen module; in the second, dual H190 copies were arrayed as tandem repeats in the module. Molecular dynamics simulation predicted that tandem repeat arraying would minimize secondary structural deviation of modularized H190 from its native conformation. In vivo testing supported this finding, showing that although both modularization strategies conferred high H190-specific immunogenicity, tandem repeat arraying of H190 led to a strikingly higher immune response quality, as measured by ability to generate antibodies recognizing a recombinant HA domain and split influenza virion. These findings provide new insights into the rational engineering of VLP vaccines, and could ultimately enable safe and efficacious vaccine design as an alternative to conventional approaches necessitating pathogen cultivation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Molecular Energetics in the Capsomere of Virus-Like Particle Revealed by Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Lin Zhang; Ronghong Tang; Shu Bai; Natalie K. Connors; Linda H.L. Lua; Yap P. Chuan; Anton P. J. Middelberg; Yan Sun

Virus-like particles (VLPs) are highly organized nanoparticles that have great potential in vaccinology, gene therapy, drug delivery, and materials science. However, the application of VLPs is hindered by obstacles in their design and production due to low efficiency of self-assembly. In the present study, all-atom (AA) molecular dynamics (MD) simulations coupled with the molecular mechanics-Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA) method are utilized to examine the molecular interactions in the capsomere of a murine polyomavirus (MPV) VLP. It is found that both low ionic strength and the intracapsomere disulfide bonds are favorable for maintaining a stable capsomere. Simulation results examining the effects of solution conditions on the stabilization of a capsomere were verified by calorimetry experiments. Simulation results of free energy decomposition indicate that hydrophobic interaction is favorable for the formation of a capsomere, whereas electrostatic interaction is unfavorable. With increasing ionic strength, the dominant interaction for the stabilization of a capsomere changes from hydrophobic to electrostatic. By comprehensive analyses, the key amino acid residues (hot spots) in VP1 protein aiding formation of a capsomere in different solution conditions have been identified. These results provide molecular insights into the stabilization of building blocks for VLP and are expected to have implications in their partitioning between the correct and off-pathway reactions in VLP assembly.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2015

Biomolecular engineering of virus-like particles aided by computational chemistry methods

Lin Zhang; Linda H.L. Lua; Anton P. J. Middelberg; Yan Sun; Natalie K. Connors

Virus-like particles (VLPs) are repetitive organizations of viral proteins assembled in an appropriate physicochemical environment. VLPs can stimulate both innate and adaptive immune responses, due to their particulate structure enabling uptake by antigen presenting cells. These characteristics have led to successful development of VLP-vaccine products, and will ensure their vast potential in years to come. Future success of VLP therapeutic products will be determined by advances in their bioengineering, and also by the development of tools to design for their stability, function and application. This review focuses on approaches for VLP assembly in controlled chemical environments in vivo and in vitro, and the application of computational tools for improved chemical sequence design, and fundamental understanding of assembly.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Energetic changes caused by antigenic module insertion in a virus-like particle revealed by experiment and molecular dynamics simulations

Lin Zhang; Ronghong Tang; Shu Bai; Natalie K. Connors; Linda H.L. Lua; Yap P. Chuan; Anton P. J. Middelberg; Yan Sun

The success of recombinant virus-like particles (VLPs) for human papillomavirus and hepatitis B demonstrates the potential of VLPs as safe and efficacious vaccines. With new modular designs emerging, the effects of antigen module insertion on the self-assembly and structural integrity of VLPs should be clarified so as to better enabling improved design. Previous work has revealed insights into the molecular energetics of a VLP subunit, capsomere, comparing energetics within various solution conditions known to drive or inhibit self-assembly. In the present study, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations coupled with the molecular mechanics-Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA) method were performed to examine the molecular interactions and energetics in a modular capsomere of a murine polyomavirus (MPV) VLP designed to protect against influenza. Insertion of an influenza antigenic module is found to lower the binding energy within the capsomere, and a more active state is observed in Assembly Buffer as compared with that in Stabilization Buffer, which has been experimentally validated through measurements using differential scanning calorimetry. Further in-depth analysis based on free-energy decomposition indicates that destabilized binding can be attributed to electrostatic interaction induced by the chosen antigen module. These results provide molecular insights into the conformational stability of capsomeres and their abilities to be exploited for antigen presentation, and are expected to be beneficial for the biomolecular engineering of VLP vaccines.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2014

Microbially synthesized modular virus-like particles and capsomeres displaying group A streptococcus hypervariable antigenic determinants

Yap P. Chuan; Nani Wibowo; Natalie K. Connors; Yang Wu; Fiona K. Hughes; Michael R. Batzloff; Linda H.L. Lua; Anton P. J. Middelberg

Effective and low‐cost vaccines are essential to control severe group A streptococcus (GAS) infections prevalent in low‐income nations and the Australian aboriginal communities. Highly diverse and endemic circulating GAS strains mandate broad‐coverage and customized vaccines. This study describes an approach to deliver cross‐reactive antigens from endemic GAS strains using modular virus‐like particle (VLP) and capsomere systems. The antigens studied were three heterologous N‐terminal peptides (GAS1, GAS2, and GAS3) from the GAS surface M‐protein that are specific to endemic strains in Australia Northern Territory Aboriginal communities. In vivo data presented here demonstrated salient characteristics of the modular delivery systems in the context of GAS vaccine design. First, the antigenic peptides, when delivered by unadjuvanted modular VLPs or adjuvanted capsomeres, induced high titers of peptide‐specific IgG antibodies (over 1 × 104). Second, delivery by capsomere was superior to VLP for one of the peptides investigated (GAS3), demonstrating that the delivery system relative effectiveness was antigen‐dependant. Third, significant cross‐reactivity of GAS2‐induced IgG with GAS1 was observed using either VLP or capsomere, showing the possibility of broad‐coverage vaccine design using these delivery systems and cross‐reactive antigens. Fourth, a formulation containing three pre‐mixed modular VLPs, each at a low dose of 5 μg (corresponding to <600 ng of each GAS peptide), induced significant titers of IgGs specific to each peptide, demonstrating that a multivalent, broad‐coverage VLP vaccine formulation was possible. In summary, the modular VLPs and capsomeres reported here demonstrate, with promising preliminary data, innovative ways to design GAS vaccines using VLP and capsomere delivery systems amenable to microbial synthesis, potentially adoptable by developing countries. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2014;111: 1062–1070.


Protein Science | 2016

Design strategies to address the effect of hydrophobic epitope on stability and in vitro assembly of modular virus-like particle

Alemu Tekewe; Natalie K. Connors; Anton P. J. Middelberg; Linda H.L. Lua

Virus‐like particles (VLPs) and capsomere subunits have shown promising potential as safe and effective vaccine candidates. They can serve as platforms for the display of foreign epitopes on their surfaces in a modular architecture. Depending on the physicochemical properties of the antigenic modules, modularization may affect the expression, solubility and stability of capsomeres, and VLP assembly. In this study, three module designs of a rotavirus hydrophobic peptide (RV10) were synthesized using synthetic biology. Among the three synthetic modules, modularization of the murine polyomavirus VP1 with a single copy of RV10 flanked by long linkers and charged residues resulted in the expression of stable modular capsomeres. Further employing the approach of module titration of RV10 modules on each capsomere via Escherichia coli co‐expression of unmodified VP1 and modular VP1‐RV10 successfully translated purified modular capomeres into modular VLPs when assembled in vitro. Our results demonstrate that tailoring the physicochemical properties of modules to enhance modular capsomeres stability is achievable through synthetic biology designs. Combined with module titration strategy to avoid steric hindrance to intercapsomere interactions, this allows bioprocessing of bacterially produced in vitro assembled modular VLPs.


Food and Bioproducts Processing | 2014

Improved fusion tag cleavage strategies in the downstream processing of self-assembling virus-like particle vaccines

Natalie K. Connors; Yang Wu; Linda H.L. Lua; Anton P. J. Middelberg


Vaccine | 2015

Synthetic biology design to display an 18 kDa rotavirus large antigen on a modular virus-like particle

Linda H.L. Lua; Yuanyuan Fan; Cindy Chang; Natalie K. Connors; Anton P. J. Middelberg

Collaboration


Dive into the Natalie K. Connors's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Linda H.L. Lua

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yap P. Chuan

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nani Wibowo

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yang Wu

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lin Zhang

Ministry of Education

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yan Sun

Ministry of Education

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alemu Tekewe

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge