Synthesis and Optimization of Next-Generation Low-Molecular-Weight Pentablock Copolymer Nanoadjuvants.
Alaric C SiddowayBrianna M WhiteBalaji NarasimhanSurya K MallapragadaPublished in: Vaccines (2023)
Polymeric nanomaterials such as Pluronic ® -based pentablock copolymers offer important advantages over traditional vaccine adjuvants and have been increasingly investigated in an effort to develop more efficacious vaccines. Previous work with Pluronic ® F127-based pentablock copolymers, functionalized with poly(diethyl aminoethyl methacrylate) (PDEAEM) blocks, demonstrated adjuvant capabilities through the antigen presentation and crosslinking of B cell receptors. In this work, we describe the synthesis and optimization of a new family of low-molecular-weight Pluronic ® -based pentablock copolymer nanoadjuvants with high biocompatibility and improved adjuvanticity at low doses. We synthesized low-molecular-weight Pluronic ® P123-based pentablock copolymers with PDEAEM blocks and investigated the relationship between polymer concentration, micellar size, and zeta potential, and measured the release kinetics of a model antigen, ovalbumin, from these nanomaterials. The Pluronic ® P123-based pentablock copolymer nanoadjuvants showed higher biocompatibility than the first-generation Pluronic ® F127-based pentablock copolymer nanoadjuvants. We assessed the adjuvant capabilities of the ovalbumin-containing Pluronic ® P123-based pentablock copolymer-based nanovaccines in mice, and showed that animals immunized with these nanovaccines elicited high antibody titers, even when used at significantly reduced doses compared to Pluronic ® F127-based pentablock copolymers. Collectively, these studies demonstrate the synthesis, self-assembly, biocompatibility, and adjuvant properties of a new family of low-molecular-weight Pluronic ® P123-based pentablock copolymer nanomaterials, with the added benefits of more efficient renal clearance, high biocompatibility, and enhanced adjuvanticity at low polymer concentrations.