Abstract:
Infectious diseases are emerging rapidly throughout the globe, and antibiotic resistant
bacterial strains lead to the therapeutic failure; ultimately causing the high risk of cost
and re-infection. Vaccination is considered as one of the most effective mechanisms for
the treatment of a particular disease; and conventional vaccinology approaches have
rendered certain limitations against some pathogens. Reverse vaccinology and
subtractive proteomics are novel competent computational approaches to identify
putative therapeutic targets against the infectious agents. In current study we have
developed an in silico, multi-threaded, configurable and scalable pipeline employing
subtractive-reverse vaccinology analysis technique and named it VacSol
(https://sourceforge.net/projects/vacsol/). The principle objective of the VacSol
development is to screen out genes/proteins from microbial genome/proteome that could
be employed as potential therapeutic targets against them and furthermore be exploited
for in vitro and in vivo laboratory evaluation.
VacSol is multi-mode approach working as a standalone tool as well as a pipeline or a
package of tools. It has two major features, first is to prioritize proteins followed by
determination of the major histocompatibility complex MHCI & II for the prioritized
proteins. VacSol evaluates whole proteome (composed of thousands of protein
sequences) of a microbe and prioritize the proteins being essential, virulent, non-host homolog
and immunogenic simultaneously and then additionally perform epitope analysis of prioritized
proteins. .
A study was conducted in Atta-ur-Rahman School of Applied Biosciences ASAB,
NUST based on reverse vaccinology using online web based tools and evaluated the
whole proteome of Helicobacter Pylori 26695. The approach took more than five
months to prioritize proteins as potential therapeutic targets and their immunogenic
peptides conserved among all H. pylori strains. VacSol was employed to repeat the same
analysis and it evaluated Helicobacter Pylori proteome containing 1,576 proteins within
one and a half hour on four core machine and provided ten protein sequences as
candidates for vaccine targets which can be further subjected for laboratory evaluation
by domain experts. VacSol efficiently reduces the laborious and hectic effort of months
by generating results within a few hours by integrating all the required tools. VacSol
results can also be accelerated in proportion to number of cores available in the machine.
By default it uses maximum number of available cores, but this feature is governable.
VacSol was deployed and tested at Ubuntu 12.04 64 bit machine. Its results do not
depend on any universal set of rules that may vary based on the provided input and the
version of tools that have integrated in this pipeline. VacSol is an efficient, cost and
time effective tool that eliminates the false candidates and recognizes the potential
therapeutic targets for further laboratory evaluation.