Teh-Yung Liu
Food and Drug Administration
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
Rachel Schneerson; Joanna Kubler-Kielb; Teh-Yung Liu; Zhongdong Dai; Stephen H. Leppla; Alfred L. Yergey; Peter S. Backlund; Joseph Shiloach; Fathy Majadly; John B. Robbins
Both the protective antigen (PA) and the poly(γ-d-glutamic acid) capsule (γdPGA) are essential for the virulence of Bacillus anthracis. A critical level of vaccine-induced IgG anti-PA confers immunity to anthrax, but there is no information about the protective action of IgG anti-γdPGA. Because the number of spores presented by bioterrorists might be greater than encountered in nature, we sought to induce capsular antibodies to expand the immunity conferred by available anthrax vaccines. The nonimmunogenic γdPGA or corresponding synthetic peptides were bound to BSA, recombinant B. anthracis PA (rPA), or recombinant Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (rEPA). To identify the optimal construct, conjugates of B. anthracis γdPGA, Bacillus pumilus γdLPGA, and peptides of varying lengths (5-, 10-, or 20-mers), of the d or l configuration with active groups at the N or C termini, were bound at 5–32 mol per protein. The conjugates were characterized by physico-chemical and immunological assays, including GLC-MS and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight spectrometry, and immunogenicity in 5- to 6-week-old mice. IgG anti-γdPGA and antiprotein were measured by ELISA. The highest levels of IgG anti-γdPGA were elicited by decamers of γdPGA at 10 –20 mol per protein bound to the N- or C-terminal end. High IgG anti-γdPGA levels were elicited by two injections of 2.5 μg of γdPGA per mouse, whereas three injections were needed to achieve high levels of protein antibodies. rPA was the most effective carrier. Anti-γdPGA induced opsonophagocytic killing of B. anthracis tox–, cap+. γdPGA conjugates may enhance the protection conferred by PA alone. γdPGA-rPA conjugates induced both anti-PA and anti-γdPGA.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Joanna Kubler-Kielb; Fathy Majadly; Zuzana Biesova; Christopher Mocca; Chunyan Guo; Ruth S. Nussenzweig; Victor Nussenzweig; Satish Mishra; Yimin Wu; Louis H. Miller; Jerry M. Keith; Teh-Yung Liu; John B. Robbins; Rachel Schneerson
There is yet no licensed vaccine against malaria, a serious human disease affecting mostly children, with an annual death rate of about one million. Plasmodia, the malaria-causing parasites, have two obligatory hosts: mammals or birds, in which they multiply asexually, and mosquitoes with sexual multiplication. The most common and serious type of malaria is caused by Plasmodium falciparum. The circumsporozoite protein (CSP), a major surface antigen of sporozoites, is a protective antigen. A unique feature of P. falciparum CSP is its large central domain composed of over 30 tetrapeptide repeats of Asn-Ala-Asn-Pro (NANP). Several NANP peptide-protein conjugates were tested clinically but elicited a low level of CSP antibodies for a short duration. To provide a CSP-based candidate vaccine, we investigated recombinant CSP and NANP conjugates of various peptide lengths, with different N-terminal amino acids, bound at different ratios to various carrier proteins. Injected into mice, CSP alone and CSP or NANP conjugates induced antibodies with booster responses and were positive by the sporozoite imunofluorescent assay. The use of the mosquito stage P. falciparum ookinete surface protein, Pfs25, cross-linked onto itself as a carrier for NANP, induced in mice high levels of uniquely long-lasting antibodies to both vaccine components with secondary biological activities, that will provide immunity to liver infection by sporozoites and block transmission by mosquitoes.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1982
Emil C. Gotschlich; Teh-Yung Liu; Eduardo Oliveira
Human CRP and the CRPs of other species bind Ca2+ ion. After binding of the divalent cation, CRP binds all phosphate monoesters with a stochiometry of one mole per mole of CRP subunit. Replacement of the phosphate monoester group by other acidic groups or by conversion to a phosphodiester markedly diminishes or abolishes the ability to bind. Phosphorylcholine is bound by CRP with much higher affinity than other phosphate monoesters speaking for a second binding site with specificity for the positively charged trimethylammonium group. The distance separating the phosphate from the positively charged group may be relevant. Protein that has been coupled with phosphorylcholine or phosphorylethanolamine is able to precipitate with CRP. Several natural substances including pneumococcal-C polysaccharide which react with CRP have been found to contain phosphorylcholine. In addition CRP has another binding site accounting for its ability to react with depyruvylated type 4 pneumococcal polysaccharide which does not contain phosphate or choline.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1981
Emil C. Gotschlich; B A Fraser; O Nishimura; J B Robbins; Teh-Yung Liu
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1971
Teh-Yung Liu; Emil C. Gotschlich; Florence T. Dunne; Elsey K. Jonssen
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1971
Teh-Yung Liu; Emil C. Gotschlich; Elsey K. Jonssen; Jeanne R. Wysocki
Biochemistry | 1977
William Egan; Teh-Yung Liu; Donna Dorow; Jack S. Cohen; Joan D. Robbins; Emil C. Gotschlich; John B. Robbins
Journal of Immunology | 1980
E B Oliveira; Emil C. Gotschlich; Teh-Yung Liu
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1967
Teh-Yung Liu; Emil C. Gotschlich
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1977
Mary P. Glode; John B. Robbins; Teh-Yung Liu; Emil C. Gotschlich; Ida Ørskov; Frits Ørskov