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Dive into the research topics where Oscar B. Torres is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar B. Torres.


Vaccine | 2014

Adjuvants for vaccines to drugs of abuse and addiction.

Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas; Oscar B. Torres; Rashmi Jalah; Zoltan Beck

Immunotherapeutic vaccines to drugs of abuse, including nicotine, cocaine, heroin, oxycodone, methamphetamine, and others are being developed. The theoretical basis of such vaccines is to induce antibodies that sequester the drug in the blood in the form of antibody-bound drug that cannot cross the blood brain barrier, thereby preventing psychoactive effects. Because the drugs are haptens a successful vaccine relies on development of appropriate hapten-protein carrier conjugates. However, because induction of high and prolonged levels of antibodies is required for an effective vaccine, and because injection of T-independent haptenic drugs of abuse does not induce memory recall responses, the role of adjuvants during immunization plays a critical role. As reviewed herein, preclinical studies often use strong adjuvants such as complete and incomplete Freunds adjuvant and others that cannot be, or in the case of many newer adjuvants, have never been, employed in humans. Balanced against this, the only adjuvant that has been included in candidate vaccines in human clinical trials to nicotine and cocaine has been aluminum hydroxide gel. While aluminum salts have been widely utilized worldwide in numerous licensed vaccines, the experience with human responses to aluminum salt-adjuvanted vaccines to haptenic drugs of abuse has suggested that the immune responses are too weak to allow development of a successful vaccine. What is needed is an adjuvant or combination of adjuvants that are safe, potent, widely available, easily manufactured, and cost-effective. Based on our review of the field we recommend the following adjuvant combinations either for research or for product development for human use: aluminum salt with adsorbed monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA); liposomes containing MPLA [L(MPLA)]; L(MPLA) adsorbed to aluminum salt; oil-in-water emulsion; or oil-in-water emulsion containing MPLA.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2014

Characterization and optimization of heroin hapten-BSA conjugates: method development for the synthesis of reproducible hapten-based vaccines

Oscar B. Torres; Rashmi Jalah; Kenner C. Rice; Fuying Li; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Malliga R. Iyer; Arthur E. Jacobson; Mohamed Nazim Boutaghou; Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas

A potential new treatment for drug addiction is immunization with vaccines that induce antibodies that can abrogate the addictive effects of the drug of abuse. One of the challenges in the development of a vaccine against drugs of abuse is the availability of an optimum procedure that gives reproducible and high yielding hapten-protein conjugates. In this study, a heroin/morphine surrogate hapten (MorHap) was coupled to bovine serum albumin (BSA) using maleimide-thiol chemistry. MorHap-BSA conjugates with 3, 5, 10, 15, 22, 28, and 34 haptens were obtained using different linker and hapten ratios. Using this optimized procedure, MorHap-BSA conjugates were synthesized with highly reproducible results and in high yields. The number of haptens attached to BSA was compared by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) assay, modified Ellman’s test and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Among the three methods, MALDI-TOF MS discriminated subtle differences in hapten density. The effect of hapten density on enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) performance was evaluated with seven MorHap-BSA conjugates of varying hapten densities, which were used as coating antigens. The highest antibody binding was obtained with MorHap-BSA conjugates containing 3–5 haptens. This is the first report that rigorously analyzes, optimizes and characterizes the conjugation of haptens to proteins that can be used for vaccines against drugs of abuse. The effect of hapten density on the ELISA detection of antibodies against haptens demonstrates the importance of careful characterization of the hapten density by the analytical techniques described.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2015

Efficacy, but Not Antibody Titer or Affinity, of a Heroin Hapten Conjugate Vaccine Correlates with Increasing Hapten Densities on Tetanus Toxoid, but Not on CRM197 Carriers

Rashmi Jalah; Oscar B. Torres; Alexander V. Mayorov; Fuying Li; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Arthur E. Jacobson; Kenner C. Rice; Jeffrey R. Deschamps; Zoltan Beck; Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas

Vaccines against drugs of abuse have induced antibodies in animals that blocked the biological effects of the drug by sequestering the drug in the blood and preventing it from crossing the blood-brain barrier. Drugs of abuse are too small to induce antibodies and, therefore, require conjugation of drug hapten analogs to a carrier protein. The efficacy of these conjugate vaccines depends on several factors including hapten design, coupling strategy, hapten density, carrier protein selection, and vaccine adjuvant. Previously, we have shown that 1 (MorHap), a heroin/morphine hapten, conjugated to tetanus toxoid (TT) and mixed with liposomes containing monophosphoryl lipid A [L(MPLA)] as adjuvant, partially blocked the antinociceptive effects of heroin in mice. Herein, we extended those findings, demonstrating greatly improved vaccine induced antinociceptive effects up to 3% mean maximal potential effect (%MPE). This was obtained by evaluating the effects of vaccine efficacy of hapten 1 vaccine conjugates with varying hapten densities using two different commonly used carrier proteins, TT and cross-reactive material 197 (CRM197). Immunization of mice with these conjugates mixed with L(MPLA) induced very high anti-1 IgG peak levels of 400-1500 μg/mL that bound to both heroin and its metabolites, 6-acetylmorphine and morphine. Except for the lowest hapten density for each carrier, the antibody titers and affinity were independent of hapten density. The TT carrier based vaccines induced long-lived inhibition of heroin-induced antinociception that correlated with increasing hapten density. The best formulation contained TT with the highest hapten density of ≥30 haptens/TT molecule and induced %MPE of approximately 3% after heroin challenge. In contrast, the best formulation using CRM197 was with intermediate 1 densities (10-15 haptens/CRM197 molecule), but the %MPE was approximately 13%. In addition, the chemical synthesis of 1, the optimization of the conjugation method, and the methods for the accurate quantification of hapten density are described.


npj Vaccines | 2017

Heroin-HIV-1 (H2) vaccine: induction of dual immunologic effects with a heroin hapten-conjugate and an HIV-1 envelope V2 peptide with liposomal lipid A as an adjuvant

Oscar B. Torres; Gary R. Matyas; Mangala Rao; Kristina K. Peachman; Rashmi Jalah; Zoltan Beck; Nelson L. Michael; Kenner C. Rice; Arthur E. Jacobson; Carl R. Alving

A synthetic heroin analog (MorHap) and a synthetic 42 amino acid V2 loop peptide from A/E strain of HIV-1 gp120 envelope protein that was previously used in a successful phase III vaccine trial were constructed as antigens together with liposomes containing monophosphoryl lipid A as an adjuvant, to explore the feasibility of producing a dual use vaccine both for treatment of heroin addiction and prevention of HIV-1 infection among injection drug users. The V2 peptide was tethered by a palmitoyl fatty acyl tail embedded in the liposomal lipid bilayer, and the heroin analog was conjugated to tetanus toxoid as a carrier protein that was mixed with the adjuvant. Upon comparison of a linear V2 peptide with a cyclic peptide, differences were found in the secondary configurations by circular dichroism, with the tethered cyclic peptide (palm-cyclic peptide) entirely in a random coil, and the tethered linear V2 peptide (palm-linear V2 peptide) entirely in a beta-sheet. Upon immunization of mice, palm-cyclic peptide induced anti-cyclic peptide endpoint titers >106 and was considered to be a better immunogen overall than palm-linear V2 peptide for inducing antibodies to gp120 and gp70-V1V2. The antibodies also inhibited the binding of V2 peptide to the HIV-1 α4β7 integrin receptor. Antibody titers to MorHap, even with the presence of injected cyclic peptide, were very high, and resulted in inhibition of the hyper-locomotion and antinociception effects of injected heroin. From these initial experiments, we conclude that with a potent adjuvant and mostly synthetic constituents, a vaccine directed to heroin and HIV-1 (H2 vaccine) could be a feasible objective.Drug addiction: Dual-use vaccine shows promise for heroin and HIVA vaccine designed to treat heroin addiction while at the same time preventing HIV infection elicited strong immune responses in mice. Scientists from the US government led by Carl Alving from the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Bethesda, Maryland, created a dual vaccine formulated with three main components: a segment of a protein expressed on the surface of HIV; synthetic molecules that resemble heroin and its degradation products; and a potent adjuvant to stimulate the immune system. Mice immunized with this vaccine had high antibody titers against the HIV surface protein as well as heroin and its derivatives. These mice also showed dulled responses to injected heroin. The findings suggest this vaccine strategy could help fight heroin abuse and the high risk of HIV infection among intravenous drug users.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

A Stable Heroin Analogue That Can Serve as a Vaccine Hapten to Induce Antibodies That Block the Effects of Heroin and Its Metabolites in Rodents and That Cross-React Immunologically with Related Drugs of Abuse

Agnieszka Sulima; Rashmi Jalah; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Oscar B. Torres; Gregory H. Imler; Jeffrey R. Deschamps; Zoltan Beck; Carl R. Alving; Arthur E. Jacobson; Kenner C. Rice; Gary R. Matyas

An improved synthesis of a haptenic heroin surrogate 1 (6-AmHap) is reported. The intermediate needed for the preparation of 1 was described in the route in the synthesis of 2 (DiAmHap). A scalable procedure was developed to install the C-3 amido group. Using the Boc protectng group in 18 allowed preparation of 1 in an overall yield of 53% from 4 and eliminated the necessity of preparing the diamide 13. Hapten 1 was conjugated to tetanus toxoid and mixed with liposomes containing monophosphoryl lipid A as an adjuvant. The 1 vaccine induced high anti-1 IgG levels that reduced heroin-induced antinociception and locomotive behavioral changes following repeated subcutaneous and intravenous heroin challenges in mice and rats. Vaccinated mice had reduced heroin-induced hyperlocomotion following a 50 mg/kg heroin challenge. The 1 vaccine-induced antibodies bound to heroin and other abused opioids, including hydrocodone, oxycodone, hydromorphone, oxymorphone, and codeine.


Archive | 2016

Practical Considerations for the Development of Vaccines Against Drugs of Abuse

Oscar B. Torres; Carl R. Alving; Arthur E. Jacobson; Kenner C. Rice; Gary R. Matyas

Substance abuse vaccines function by producing antibodies that bind the drug of abuse and prevent it from crossing the blood–brain barrier. This blocks the drug from entering the brain where the drug’s psychoactive effects are induced as a result of interaction with drug receptors. From an immunologic standpoint, vaccines to substance abuse must induce sufficient amounts of antibodies with high affinities against the drug to prevent sufficient quantities of the drug from entering the brain to cause euphoria and addiction. In addition, the antibodies must have minimal cross-reactivity against other structurally related drugs that are in therapeutic use. The development and licensure of a vaccine against a drug of abuse, as with any vaccine or pharmaceutical, are expected to be expensive. Consequently, the practical aspects of vaccine manufacture and storage must be considered early in the vaccine development process to minimize the cost of the vaccine and ensure that the formulation can be pharmaceutically developed. These practical aspects include (1) hapten design and conjugation chemistry, (2) analytical characterization of the conjugate, (3) carrier protein yield and stability after conjugation, (4) selection of a potent adjuvant, (5) feasibility for human use of both the carrier protein and the adjuvant, (6) batch-to-batch reproducibility, and (7) vaccine stability on storage. These practical considerations, though crucial for the advancement of vaccines to clinical trials and licensure, are often discounted at the early stage of vaccine development. We will discuss the strategy that we developed in our work on an anti-heroin vaccine and through numerous clinical trials of liposome-based vaccines for infectious diseases and cancer.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2018

Immune response to antigen adsorbed to aluminum hydroxide particles: Effects of co-adsorption of ALF or ALFQ adjuvant to the aluminum-antigen complex

Zoltan Beck; Oscar B. Torres; Gary R. Matyas; David E. Lanar; Carl R. Alving

&NA; Aluminum salts have been used as vaccine adjuvants for >50 years, and they are currently present in at least 146 licensed vaccines worldwide. In this study we examined whether adsorption of Army Liposome Formulation (ALF) to an aluminum salt that already has an antigen adsorbed to it might result in improved immune potency of the aluminum‐adsorbed antigen. ALF is composed of a family of anionic liposome‐based adjuvants, in which the liposomes contain synthetic phospholipids having dimyristoyl fatty acyl groups, cholesterol and monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA). For certain candidate vaccines, ALF has been added to aluminum hydroxide (AH) gel as a second adjuvant to form ALFA. Here we show that different methods of preparation of ALF changed the physical structures of both ALF and ALFA. Liposomes containing the saponin QS21 (ALFQ) have also been mixed with AH to form ALFQA as an effective combination. In this study, we first adsorbed one of two different antigens to AH, either tetanus toxoid conjugated to 34 copies of a hapten (MorHap), which has been used in a candidate heroin vaccine, or gp140 protein derived from the envelope protein of HIV‐1. We then co‐adsorbed ALF or ALFQ to the AH to form ALFA or ALFQA. In each case, the immune potency of the antigen adsorbed to AH was greatly increased by co‐adsorbing either ALF or ALFQ to the AH. Based on IgG subtype and cytokine analysis by ELISPOT, ALFA induced predominately a Th2‐type response and ALFQ and ALFQA each induced more balanced Th1/Th2 responses. Graphical abstract Figure. No Caption available.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2018

A rapid solution-based method for determining the affinity of heroin hapten-induced antibodies to heroin, its metabolites, and other opioids

Oscar B. Torres; Alexander J. Duval; Agnieszka Sulima; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Arthur E. Jacobson; Kenner C. Rice; Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas

AbstractWe describe for the first time a method that utilizes microscale thermophoresis (MST) technology to determine polyclonal antibody affinities to small molecules. Using a novel type of heterologous MST, we have accurately measured a solution-based binding affinity of serum antibodies to heroin which was previously impossible with other currently available methods. Moreover, this mismatch approach (i.e., using a cross-reactive hapten tracer) has never been reported in the literature. When compared with equilibrium dialysis combined with ultra-performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (ED-UPLC/MS/MS), this novel MST method yields similar binding affinity values for polyclonal antibodies to the major heroin metabolites 6-AM and morphine. Additionally, we herein report the method of synthesis of this novel cross-reactive hapten, MorHap-acetamide—a useful analog for the study of heroin hapten–antibody interactions. Using heterologous MST, we were able to determine the affinities, down to nanomolar accuracies, of polyclonal antibodies to various abused opioids. While optimizing this method, we further discovered that heroin is protected from serum esterase degradation by the presence of these antibodies in a concentration-dependent manner. Lastly, using affinity data for a number of structurally different opioids, we were able to dissect the moieties that are crucial to antibody binding. The novel MST method that is presented herein can be extended to the analysis of any ligand that is prone to degradation and can be applied not only to the development of vaccines to substances of abuse but also to the analysis of small molecule/protein interactions in the presence of serum. Graphical abstractStrategy for the determination of hapten-induced antibody affinities using Microscale thermophoresis


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Synthesis of Hapten-Protein Conjugate Vaccines with Reproducible Hapten Densities.

Oscar B. Torres; Carl R. Alving; Gary R. Matyas

The ability to prepare hapten-carrier conjugates reproducibly with consistent lot-to-lot hapten densities and protein yields is a critical component of hapten vaccine development. This entails the development of appropriate coupling chemistries that do not cause protein precipitation and the development of methods to quantify hapten density. Recently, extensive efforts have been devoted to design vaccines against drugs of abuse. We describe, herein, a method for conjugation of a morphine-like hapten (MorHap) to tetanus toxoid (TT), which involves conjugation of MorHap to the surface lysines of TT through the N-hydroxysuccinimide portion of a heterobifunctional linker and the subsequent attachment of the thiol on MorHap to the maleimide portion of the cross-linker. Methods are described for the analytical quantification of the hapten density of the conjugates using modified Ellmans test, trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) assay, and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS).


Vaccine | 2014

Facial recognition of heroin vaccine opiates: Type 1 cross-reactivities of antibodies induced by hydrolytically stable haptenic surrogates of heroin, 6-acetylmorphine, and morphine

Gary R. Matyas; Kenner C. Rice; Kejun Cheng; Fuying Li; Joshua F. G. Antoline; Malliga R. Iyer; Arthur E. Jacobson; Alexander V. Mayorov; Zoltan Beck; Oscar B. Torres; Carl R. Alving

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Carl R. Alving

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Gary R. Matyas

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Arthur E. Jacobson

National Institutes of Health

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Kenner C. Rice

National Institutes of Health

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Joshua F. G. Antoline

National Institutes of Health

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Rashmi Jalah

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Zoltan Beck

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Fuying Li

National Institutes of Health

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Jeffrey R. Deschamps

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Malliga R. Iyer

National Institutes of Health

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