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Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants

Vaccine adjuvants have been reported to induce both mucosal and systemic immunity when applied to mucosal surfaces and this dual response appears important for protection against certain pathogens. Despite the potential advantages, however, no mucosal adjuvants are currently approved for human use....

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Autores principales: Wong, Pamela T., Leroueil, Pascale R., Smith, Douglas M., Ciotti, Susan, Bielinska, Anna U., Janczak, Katarzyna W., Mullen, Catherine H., Groom, Jeffrey V., Taylor, Erin M., Passmore, Crystal, Makidon, Paul E., O’Konek, Jessica J., Myc, Andrzej, Hamouda, Tarek, Baker, James R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4427474/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25962136
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126120
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author Wong, Pamela T.
Leroueil, Pascale R.
Smith, Douglas M.
Ciotti, Susan
Bielinska, Anna U.
Janczak, Katarzyna W.
Mullen, Catherine H.
Groom, Jeffrey V.
Taylor, Erin M.
Passmore, Crystal
Makidon, Paul E.
O’Konek, Jessica J.
Myc, Andrzej
Hamouda, Tarek
Baker, James R.
author_facet Wong, Pamela T.
Leroueil, Pascale R.
Smith, Douglas M.
Ciotti, Susan
Bielinska, Anna U.
Janczak, Katarzyna W.
Mullen, Catherine H.
Groom, Jeffrey V.
Taylor, Erin M.
Passmore, Crystal
Makidon, Paul E.
O’Konek, Jessica J.
Myc, Andrzej
Hamouda, Tarek
Baker, James R.
author_sort Wong, Pamela T.
collection PubMed
description Vaccine adjuvants have been reported to induce both mucosal and systemic immunity when applied to mucosal surfaces and this dual response appears important for protection against certain pathogens. Despite the potential advantages, however, no mucosal adjuvants are currently approved for human use. Evaluating compounds as mucosal adjuvants is a slow and costly process due to the need for lengthy animal immunogenicity studies. We have constructed a library of 112 intranasal adjuvant candidate formulations consisting of oil-in-water nanoemulsions that contain various cationic and nonionic surfactants. To facilitate adjuvant development we first evaluated this library in a series of high-throughput, in vitro assays for activities associated with innate and adaptive immune activation in vivo. These in vitro assays screened for the ability of the adjuvant to bind to mucin, induce cytotoxicity, facilitate antigen uptake in epithelial and dendritic cells, and activate cellular pathways. We then sought to determine how these parameters related to adjuvant activity in vivo. While the in vitro assays alone were not enough to predict the in vivo adjuvant activity completely, several interesting relationships were found with immune responses in mice. Furthermore, by varying the physicochemical properties of the surfactant components (charge, surfactant polar head size and hydrophobicity) and the surfactant blend ratio of the formulations, the strength and type of the immune response generated (T(H)1, T(H)2, T(H)17) could be modulated. These findings suggest the possibility of using high-throughput screens to aid in the design of custom adjuvants with unique immunological profiles to match specific mucosal vaccine applications.
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spelling pubmed-44274742015-05-21 Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants Wong, Pamela T. Leroueil, Pascale R. Smith, Douglas M. Ciotti, Susan Bielinska, Anna U. Janczak, Katarzyna W. Mullen, Catherine H. Groom, Jeffrey V. Taylor, Erin M. Passmore, Crystal Makidon, Paul E. O’Konek, Jessica J. Myc, Andrzej Hamouda, Tarek Baker, James R. PLoS One Research Article Vaccine adjuvants have been reported to induce both mucosal and systemic immunity when applied to mucosal surfaces and this dual response appears important for protection against certain pathogens. Despite the potential advantages, however, no mucosal adjuvants are currently approved for human use. Evaluating compounds as mucosal adjuvants is a slow and costly process due to the need for lengthy animal immunogenicity studies. We have constructed a library of 112 intranasal adjuvant candidate formulations consisting of oil-in-water nanoemulsions that contain various cationic and nonionic surfactants. To facilitate adjuvant development we first evaluated this library in a series of high-throughput, in vitro assays for activities associated with innate and adaptive immune activation in vivo. These in vitro assays screened for the ability of the adjuvant to bind to mucin, induce cytotoxicity, facilitate antigen uptake in epithelial and dendritic cells, and activate cellular pathways. We then sought to determine how these parameters related to adjuvant activity in vivo. While the in vitro assays alone were not enough to predict the in vivo adjuvant activity completely, several interesting relationships were found with immune responses in mice. Furthermore, by varying the physicochemical properties of the surfactant components (charge, surfactant polar head size and hydrophobicity) and the surfactant blend ratio of the formulations, the strength and type of the immune response generated (T(H)1, T(H)2, T(H)17) could be modulated. These findings suggest the possibility of using high-throughput screens to aid in the design of custom adjuvants with unique immunological profiles to match specific mucosal vaccine applications. Public Library of Science 2015-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4427474/ /pubmed/25962136 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126120 Text en © 2015 Wong 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
Wong, Pamela T.
Leroueil, Pascale R.
Smith, Douglas M.
Ciotti, Susan
Bielinska, Anna U.
Janczak, Katarzyna W.
Mullen, Catherine H.
Groom, Jeffrey V.
Taylor, Erin M.
Passmore, Crystal
Makidon, Paul E.
O’Konek, Jessica J.
Myc, Andrzej
Hamouda, Tarek
Baker, James R.
Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title_full Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title_fullStr Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title_full_unstemmed Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title_short Formulation, High Throughput In Vitro Screening and In Vivo Functional Characterization of Nanoemulsion-Based Intranasal Vaccine Adjuvants
title_sort formulation, high throughput in vitro screening and in vivo functional characterization of nanoemulsion-based intranasal vaccine adjuvants
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4427474/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25962136
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126120
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