Cargando…

Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice

The disadvantages of needle-based immunisation motivate the development of simple, low cost, needle-free alternatives. Vaccine delivery to cutaneous environments rich in specialised antigen-presenting cells using microprojection patches has practical and immunological advantages over conventional ne...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pearson, Frances E., McNeilly, Celia L., Crichton, Michael L., Primiero, Clare A., Yukiko, Sally R., Fernando, Germain J. P., Chen, Xianfeng, Gilbert, Sarah C., Hill, Adrian V. S., Kendall, Mark A. F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3706440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067888
_version_ 1782476561765629952
author Pearson, Frances E.
McNeilly, Celia L.
Crichton, Michael L.
Primiero, Clare A.
Yukiko, Sally R.
Fernando, Germain J. P.
Chen, Xianfeng
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Kendall, Mark A. F.
author_facet Pearson, Frances E.
McNeilly, Celia L.
Crichton, Michael L.
Primiero, Clare A.
Yukiko, Sally R.
Fernando, Germain J. P.
Chen, Xianfeng
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Kendall, Mark A. F.
author_sort Pearson, Frances E.
collection PubMed
description The disadvantages of needle-based immunisation motivate the development of simple, low cost, needle-free alternatives. Vaccine delivery to cutaneous environments rich in specialised antigen-presenting cells using microprojection patches has practical and immunological advantages over conventional needle delivery. Additionally, stable coating of vaccine onto microprojections removes logistical obstacles presented by the strict requirement for cold-chain storage and distribution of liquid vaccine, or lyophilised vaccine plus diluent. These attributes make these technologies particularly suitable for delivery of vaccines against diseases such as malaria, which exerts its worst effects in countries with poorly-resourced healthcare systems. Live viral vectors including adenoviruses and poxviruses encoding exogenous antigens have shown significant clinical promise as vaccines, due to their ability to generate high numbers of antigen-specific T cells. Here, the simian adenovirus serotype 63 and the poxvirus modified vaccinia Ankara – two vectors under evaluation for the delivery of malaria antigens to humans – were formulated for coating onto Nanopatch microprojections and applied to murine skin. Co-formulation with the stabilising disaccharides trehalose and sucrose protected virions during the dry-coating process. Transgene-specific CD8(+) T cell responses following Nanopatch delivery of both vectors were similar to intradermal injection controls after a single immunisation (despite a much lower delivered dose), though MVA boosting of pre-primed responses with Nanopatch was found to be less effective than the ID route. Importantly, disaccharide-stabilised ChAd63 could be stored for 10 weeks at 37°C with less than 1 log(10) loss of viability, and retained single-dose immunogenicity after storage. These data support the further development of microprojection patches for the deployment of live vaccines in hot climates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3706440
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-37064402013-07-19 Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice Pearson, Frances E. McNeilly, Celia L. Crichton, Michael L. Primiero, Clare A. Yukiko, Sally R. Fernando, Germain J. P. Chen, Xianfeng Gilbert, Sarah C. Hill, Adrian V. S. Kendall, Mark A. F. PLoS One Research Article The disadvantages of needle-based immunisation motivate the development of simple, low cost, needle-free alternatives. Vaccine delivery to cutaneous environments rich in specialised antigen-presenting cells using microprojection patches has practical and immunological advantages over conventional needle delivery. Additionally, stable coating of vaccine onto microprojections removes logistical obstacles presented by the strict requirement for cold-chain storage and distribution of liquid vaccine, or lyophilised vaccine plus diluent. These attributes make these technologies particularly suitable for delivery of vaccines against diseases such as malaria, which exerts its worst effects in countries with poorly-resourced healthcare systems. Live viral vectors including adenoviruses and poxviruses encoding exogenous antigens have shown significant clinical promise as vaccines, due to their ability to generate high numbers of antigen-specific T cells. Here, the simian adenovirus serotype 63 and the poxvirus modified vaccinia Ankara – two vectors under evaluation for the delivery of malaria antigens to humans – were formulated for coating onto Nanopatch microprojections and applied to murine skin. Co-formulation with the stabilising disaccharides trehalose and sucrose protected virions during the dry-coating process. Transgene-specific CD8(+) T cell responses following Nanopatch delivery of both vectors were similar to intradermal injection controls after a single immunisation (despite a much lower delivered dose), though MVA boosting of pre-primed responses with Nanopatch was found to be less effective than the ID route. Importantly, disaccharide-stabilised ChAd63 could be stored for 10 weeks at 37°C with less than 1 log(10) loss of viability, and retained single-dose immunogenicity after storage. These data support the further development of microprojection patches for the deployment of live vaccines in hot climates. Public Library of Science 2013-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3706440/ /pubmed/23874462 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067888 Text en © 2013 Pearson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pearson, Frances E.
McNeilly, Celia L.
Crichton, Michael L.
Primiero, Clare A.
Yukiko, Sally R.
Fernando, Germain J. P.
Chen, Xianfeng
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Kendall, Mark A. F.
Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title_full Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title_fullStr Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title_short Dry-Coated Live Viral Vector Vaccines Delivered by Nanopatch Microprojections Retain Long-Term Thermostability and Induce Transgene-Specific T Cell Responses in Mice
title_sort dry-coated live viral vector vaccines delivered by nanopatch microprojections retain long-term thermostability and induce transgene-specific t cell responses in mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3706440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23874462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0067888
work_keys_str_mv AT pearsonfrancese drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT mcneillycelial drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT crichtonmichaell drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT primieroclarea drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT yukikosallyr drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT fernandogermainjp drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT chenxianfeng drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT gilbertsarahc drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT hilladrianvs drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice
AT kendallmarkaf drycoatedliveviralvectorvaccinesdeliveredbynanopatchmicroprojectionsretainlongtermthermostabilityandinducetransgenespecifictcellresponsesinmice