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ano-crystals have been established for the different variants of the fusion protein. Diffraction patterns were collected by using both conventional and serial femto-second crystallography techniques. The two crystallography techniques showed very interesting differences in both the crystal packing and unit cell dimensions of the same CTB-MPR construct. Although information has been gathered on CTB-MPR, the intact structure of fusion protein was not solved as the MPR region showed only weak electron density or was cleaved during crystallization of macroscopic crystals. The MPR region is present in micro
ano-crystals, but due to the severe limitation of the Free Electron Laser beamtime, only a partial data set was obtained and is insufficient for structure determination. However, the work of this thesis has established methods to purify large quantities of CTB-MPR and has established procedures to grow crystals for X-ray structure analysis. This has set the foundation for future structure determination experiments as well as immunization studies.

This thesis describes the structural studies of MPR-TM (residues 649-705) of HIV-1 gp41 by X-ray crystallography. MPR-TM was fused with different fusion proteins to improve the membrane protein overexpression. The expression level of MPR-TM was improved by fusion to the C-terminus of the Mistic protein, yielding ∼1 mg of pure MPR-TM protein per liter cell culture. The fusion partner Mistic was removed for final crystallization. The isolated MPR-TM protein was biophysically characterized and is a monodisperse candidate for crystallization. However, no crystal with diffraction quality was obtained even after extensive crystallization screens. A novel construct was designed to overexpress MPR-TM as a maltose binding protein (MBP) fusion. About 60 mg of MBP/MPR-TM recombinant protein was obtained from 1 liter of cell culture. Crystals of MBP/MPR-TM recombinant protein could not be obtained when MBP and MPR-TM were separated by a 42 amino acid (aa)-long linker but were obtained after changing the linker to three alanine residues. The crystals diffracted to 2.5 Å after crystallization optimization. Further analysis of the diffraction data indicated that the crystals are twinned. The final structure demonstrated that MBP crystallized as a dimer of trimers, but the electron density did not extend beyond the linker region. We determined by SDS-PAGE and MALDI-TOF MS that the crystals contained MBP only. The MPR-TM of gp41 might be cleaved during or after the process of crystallization. Comparison of the MBP trimer reported here with published trimeric MBP fusion structures indicated that MBP might form such a trimeric conformation under the effect of MPR-TM.




With no current treatment, an effective Zika virus (ZIKV) vaccine is crucial to preventsevere disease and reduce the risk of congenital Zika-associated syndrome (CZS). ZIKV is
susceptible to antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE), where non-neutralizing antibodies
upregulate infection. To overcome this, the E domain III (ZE3) is chosen for its ability to generate
neutralizing antibodies (nAb) without the risk of ADE. While ZE3 is poorly immunogenic on its
own, it has been demonstrated to produce a protective immune response when displayed on
vaccine platforms. One such platform is the recombinant immune complex (RIC), a self-binding
antibody-antigen complex that is able to generate robust immune responses through stimulating
the complement cascade. Previous RIC studies demonstrate enhancement of nAb titers and
potency when RIC vaccines are co-administered with virus-like particle (VLP) vaccines displaying
the same antigen. Since VLPs stimulate the innate immune system by acting as pathogen
associated molecular patterns (PAMP)s, we theorize that PAMPs and complement stimulation
reinforce each other, allowing for greater immune response.
In this thesis, the coadministration of ZE3 RICs and several adjuvants was evaluated in
preliminary mouse trials. The adjuvants used were the TLR5 binding segment of bacterial
flagellin, polyinosinic polycytidylic acid (Poly(I:C)) and Alum. The ZE3 RIC, ZE3 VLP, and flagellin
constructs were all produced in Nicotiana benthamiana plants through the use of geminiviral
vectors. All vaccine groups generated significant antigen-specific antibody responses, with titers
at least five-fold higher than the PBS control. Non-significant differences between vaccine groups
included a trend of increased antibody production in the Poly(IC) group. Cytokine analysis
demonstrated no significant difference between the PBS group in any vaccine group, likely
indicating poor cell stimulation in the assay, but there were trends indicating enhanced cytokine
production in the flagellin group. While adjuvant enhancements may be more prominent with
greater study duration or dosing, the lack of significant difference between the vaccine groups
reinforces the RIC platform is able to generate a robust immune response without need for
adjuvant enhancement. This demonstrates the RIC’s potential as a versatile vaccine platform for
not only ZIKV, but other vaccine targets as well.



In my research, I have studied the genetic mechanisms that underlie gene expression, in order to improve plant-based biopharmaceutical production. To do this, inspiration was drawn from naturally-occurring gene regulatory mechanisms, especially those from plant viruses, which have evolved mechanisms to co-opt the plant cellular machinery to produce high levels of viral proteins. By testing, modifying, and combining genetic elements from diverse sources, an optimized expression system has been developed that allows very rapid production of vaccine components, monoclonal antibodies, and other biopharmaceuticals. To improve target gene expression while maintaining the health and function of the plants, I identified, studied, and modified 5’ untranslated regions, combined gene terminators, and a nuclear matrix attachment region. The replication mechanisms of a plant geminivirus were also studied, which lead to additional strategies to produce more toxic biopharmaceutical proteins. Finally, the mechanisms employed by a geminivirus to spread between cells were investigated. It was demonstrated that these movement mechanisms can be functionally transplanted into a separate genus of geminivirus, allowing modified virus-based gene expression vectors to be spread between neighboring plant cells. Additionally, my work helps shed light on the basic genetic mechanisms employed by all living organisms to control gene expression.