Co-Anchoring of Engineered Immunogen and Immunostimulatory Cytokines to Alum Promotes Enhanced-Humoral Immunity.
Jason Y H ChangYash AgarwalKristen A RodriguesNoor MominKaiyuan NiBenjamin J ReadTyson J MoyerNaveen K MehtaMurillo SilvaHeikyung SuhMariane B MeloK Dane WittrupDarrell J IrvinePublished in: Advanced therapeutics (2022)
Protein antigens are often combined with aluminum hydroxide (alum), the most commonly used adjuvant in licensed vaccines; yet the immunogenicity of alum-adjuvanted vaccines leaves much room for improvement. Here, the authors demonstrate a strategy for codelivering an immunostimulatory cytokine, the interleukin IL-21, with an engineered outer domain (eOD) human immunodeficiency virus gp120 Env immunogen eOD, bound together to alum to bolster the humoral immune response. In this approach, the immunogen and cytokine are co-anchored to alum particles via a short phosphoserine (pSer) peptide linker, promoting stable binding to alum and sustained bioavailability following injection. pSer-modified eOD and IL-21 promote enhanced lymphatic drainage and lead to accumulation of the vaccine in B cell follicles in the draining lymph nodes. This in turn promotes enhanced T follicular helper cell priming and robust germinal center responses as well as increased antigen-specific serum IgG titers. This is a general strategy for codelivery of immunostimulatory cytokine with immunogens providing a facile approach to modulate T cell priming and GC reactions toward enhanced protective immunity using the most common clinical vaccine adjuvant.
Keyphrases
- immune response
- human immunodeficiency virus
- lymph node
- early stage
- dendritic cells
- single cell
- antiretroviral therapy
- stem cells
- toll like receptor
- ultrasound guided
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- highly efficient
- mass spectrometry
- quantum dots
- bone marrow
- gas chromatography
- aqueous solution
- rectal cancer
- tandem mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- simultaneous determination