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DNA Anchoring Strength Directly Correlates with Spherical Nucleic Acid-Based HPV E7 Cancer Vaccine Potency.

Jeongmin HwangJasper Wilson DittmarJanice KangTonatiuh OcampoMichael EvangelopoulosZhenyu HanSergej KudrukJochen LorchChad Alexander Mirkin
Published in: Nano letters (2024)
Vaccination for cancers arising from human papillomavirus (HPV) infection holds immense potential, yet clinical success has been elusive. Herein, we describe vaccination studies involving spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) incorporating a CpG adjuvant and a peptide antigen (E7 11-19 ) from the HPV-E7 oncoprotein. Administering the vaccine to humanized mice induced immunity-dependent on the oligonucleotide anchor chemistry (cholesterol vs (C12) 9 ). SNAs containing a (C12) 9 -anchor enhanced IFN-γ production >200-fold, doubled memory CD8 + T-cell formation, and delivered more than twice the amount of oligonucleotide to lymph nodes in vivo compared to a simple admixture. Importantly, the analogous construct with a weaker cholesterol anchor performed similar to admix. Moreover, (C12) 9 -SNAs activated 50% more dendritic cells and generated T-cells cytotoxic toward an HPV + cancer cell line, UM-SCC-104, with near 2-fold greater efficiency. These observations highlight the pivotal role of structural design, and specifically oligonucleotide anchoring strength (which correlates with overall construct stability), in developing efficacious therapeutic vaccines.
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