Leo Hanke

Leo Hanke

Assistant Professor
Visiting address: Karolinska universitetssjukhuset B2 03, 17176 Stockholm
Postal address: K2 Medicin, Solna, K2 Infekt Broliden K Hanke Leo, 171 77 Stockholm

Articles

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Grants

  • European Research Council
    1 January 2025 - 31 December 2029
    Vaccines are critical in preventing viral diseases, and recent advances in vaccine development and delivery platforms have enhanced their reach and efficacy. Viral glycoproteins that mediate host cell entry are the primary target of the humoral immune response and thus the main antigenic component of vaccines. However, for many viruses, we lack fundamental biological insights that would easily allow transforming their glycoproteins into highly effective vaccine antigens. In this proposal, I introduce a completely novel approach to thoroughly extract structural and functional insights of viral glycoproteins for rational design of superior antigens. By conducting nanobody repertoire screens, I will bypass common constraints encountered in antibody screening, such as immunodominance bias and redundancy. Contrasting with conventional techniques that narrowly target a limited selection of epitopes, my approach promises an exhaustive mapping of glycoprotein surfaces and epitopes. This paradigm shift enables antigen rather than antibody or nanobody characterization. By determining high-resolution cryoEM structures of nanobodies bound to glycoproteins in transitional states, we will understand their structural dynamics. Equipped with these unparalleled insights, we will harness pioneering deep learning methods to computationally design glycoproteins with enhanced antigenic form and exposed neutralizing surfaces. I will showcase this method for viruses with high case fatality rates, including Hendra, Nipah, Lassa, Tick-borne encephalitis, and Borna disease viruses. VaxVision is set to offer a comprehensive framework for the antigen design of these and genetically or structurally related viruses. My work aims to capitalize on the unused potential for vaccine antigen improvement and will provide an innovative workflow for extracting mechanistic insights and leveraging them for vaccine antigen design, with the potential to drive vaccine innovations beyond just viral pathogens.
  • Swedish Research Council
    1 January 2022 - 31 December 2025
    Invading pathogens are recognized by genetically encoded sensors that trigger innate immune responses. Surprisingly, the molecular details of innate viral sensing are poorly understood. While many studies focus on transcriptional or post-transcriptional changes upon infection, I propose a fundamentally different approach: I will use cellular thermal shift assays to identify and study proteins involved in sensing viruses. I will compare how different pathogenic RNA viruses are recognized by different pattern recognition receptors. This approach will allow, for the first time, to resolve the molecular events in a temporal manner. A better understanding of the fundamental concepts of innate antiviral immunity will contribute to better treat viral and associated autoimmune diseases and guide the development of vaccines and antivirals.In a parallel project, I will make use of camelid-derived nanobodies to probe and neutralize the surface glycoproteins of henipaviruses, which cause respiratory illness and encephalitis with fatality rates of 50-100%. I will define vulnerable parts of the glycoproteins and probe their function during virus attachment and fusion. This will directly yield nanobodies with potential for passive immunization, therapeutic applications, or diagnostics. In addition, it will increase our understanding of the henipavirus cell entry, help to understand naturally occurring variants, define (new) vulnerable epitopes, and has implications for vaccine design.

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