Login / Signup

Development of an engineered extracellular vesicles-based vaccine platform for combined delivery of mRNA and protein to induce functional immunity.

Xin LuoKathleen M McAndrewsKent A ArianSami J MorseViktoria BoekerShreyasee V KumbharYingying HuKrishnan K MahadevanKaira A ChurchSriram ChittaNicolas T RyujinJanine HenselJianli DaiDara P DowlatshahiHikaru SugimotoMichelle L KirtleyValerie S LeBleuShabnam ShalapourJoe H SimmonsRaghu Kalluri
Published in: Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society (2024)
mRNA incorporated in lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) became a new class of vaccine modality for induction of immunity against COVID-19 and ushered in a new era in vaccine development. Here, we report a novel, easy-to-execute, and cost effective engineered extracellular vesicles (EVs)-based combined mRNA and protein vaccine platform (EV X-M+P vaccine) and explore its utility in proof-of-concept immunity studies in the settings of cancer and infectious disease. As a first example, we engineered EVs, natural nanoparticle carriers shed by all cells, to contain ovalbumin mRNA and protein (EV OvaM+P vaccine) to serve as cancer vaccine against ovalbumin-expressing melanoma tumors. EV OvaM+P administration to mice with established melanoma tumors resulted in tumor regression associated with effective humoral and adaptive immune responses. As a second example, we generated engineered EVs that contain Spike (S) mRNA and protein to serve as a combined mRNA and protein vaccine (EV SpikeM+P vaccine) against SARS-CoV-2 infection. EV SpikeM+P vaccine administration in mice and baboons elicited robust production of neutralizing IgG antibodies against RBD (receptor binding domain) of S protein and S protein specific T cell responses. Our proof-of-concept study describes a new platform with an ability for rapid development of combination mRNA and protein vaccines employing EVs for deployment against cancer and other diseases.
Keyphrases