Chemical and Immunological Characteristics of Aluminum-Based, Oil-Water Emulsion, and Bacterial-Origin Adjuvants.
Susana MartiñónAngel CisnerosSergio VillicañaRicardo Hernández-MiramontesEdgar MixcohaPsyché Calderón-VargasPublished in: Journal of immunology research (2019)
Adjuvants are a diverse family of substances whose main objective is to increase the strength, quality, and duration of the immune response caused by vaccines. The most commonly used adjuvants are aluminum-based, oil-water emulsion, and bacterial-origin adjuvants. In this paper, we will discuss how the election of adjuvants is important for the adjuvant-mediated induction of immunity for different types of vaccines. Aluminum-based adjuvants are the most commonly used, the safest, and have the best efficacy, due to the triggering of a strong humoral response, albeit generating a weak induction of cell-mediated immune response. Freund's adjuvant is the most widely used oil-water emulsion adjuvant in animal trials; it stimulates inflammation and causes aggregation and precipitation of soluble protein antigens that facilitate the uptake by antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Adjuvants of bacterial origin, such as flagellin, E. coli membranes, and monophosphoryl lipid A (MLA), are known to potentiate immune responses, but their safety and risks are the main concern of their clinical use. This minireview summarizes the mechanisms that classic and novel adjuvants produce to stimulate immune responses.
Keyphrases
- immune response
- dendritic cells
- early stage
- toll like receptor
- fatty acid
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- small molecule
- mesenchymal stem cells
- stem cells
- drinking water
- cell proliferation
- bone marrow
- quality improvement
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- protein protein
- risk assessment
- pi k akt
- cell cycle arrest