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DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines

Vaccination remains the most effective and essential prophylactic tool against infectious diseases. Enormous efforts have been made to develop effective vaccines against malaria but successes remain so far limited. Novel adjuvants may offer a significant advantage in the development of malaria vacci...

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Autores principales: Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo, M. Salman, Ahmed, O. Mohsen, Mona, L. Storni, Federico, S. Roesti, Elisa, A. Skinner, Murray, D. Heath, Matthew, F. Kramer, Matthias, M. Khan, Shahid, J. Janse, Chris, V. S. Hill, Adrian, F. Bachmann, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6313579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30469323
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diseases6040107
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author Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo
M. Salman, Ahmed
O. Mohsen, Mona
L. Storni, Federico
S. Roesti, Elisa
A. Skinner, Murray
D. Heath, Matthew
F. Kramer, Matthias
M. Khan, Shahid
J. Janse, Chris
V. S. Hill, Adrian
F. Bachmann, Martin
author_facet Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo
M. Salman, Ahmed
O. Mohsen, Mona
L. Storni, Federico
S. Roesti, Elisa
A. Skinner, Murray
D. Heath, Matthew
F. Kramer, Matthias
M. Khan, Shahid
J. Janse, Chris
V. S. Hill, Adrian
F. Bachmann, Martin
author_sort Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo
collection PubMed
description Vaccination remains the most effective and essential prophylactic tool against infectious diseases. Enormous efforts have been made to develop effective vaccines against malaria but successes remain so far limited. Novel adjuvants may offer a significant advantage in the development of malaria vaccines, in particular if combined with inherently immunogenic platforms, such as virus-like particles (VLP). Dioleoyl phosphatidylserine (DOPS), which is expressed on the outer surface of apoptotic cells, represents a novel adjuvant candidate that may confer significant advantage over existing adjuvants, such as alum. In the current study we assessed the potential of DOPS to serve as an adjuvant in the development of a vaccine against malaria either alone or combined with VLP using Plasmodium falciparum thrombospondin-related adhesive protein (TRAP) as a target antigen. TRAP was chemically coupled to VLPs derived from the cucumber mosaic virus fused to a universal T cell epitope of tetanus toxin (CuMVtt). Mice were immunized with TRAP alone or formulated in alum or DOPS and compared to TRAP coupled to CuMVtt formulated in PBS or DOPS. Induced immune responses, in particular T cell responses, were assessed as the major protective effector cell population induced by TRAP. The protective capacity of the various formulations was assessed using a transgenic Plasmodium berghei expressing PfTRAP. All vaccine formulations using adjuvants and/or VLP increased humoral and T cell immunogenicity for PfTRAP compared to the antigen alone. Display on VLPs, in particular if formulated with DOPS, induced the strongest and most protective immune response. Thus, the combination of VLP with DOPS may harness properties of both immunogenic components and optimally enhance induction of protective immune responses.
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spelling pubmed-63135792019-01-04 DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo M. Salman, Ahmed O. Mohsen, Mona L. Storni, Federico S. Roesti, Elisa A. Skinner, Murray D. Heath, Matthew F. Kramer, Matthias M. Khan, Shahid J. Janse, Chris V. S. Hill, Adrian F. Bachmann, Martin Diseases Article Vaccination remains the most effective and essential prophylactic tool against infectious diseases. Enormous efforts have been made to develop effective vaccines against malaria but successes remain so far limited. Novel adjuvants may offer a significant advantage in the development of malaria vaccines, in particular if combined with inherently immunogenic platforms, such as virus-like particles (VLP). Dioleoyl phosphatidylserine (DOPS), which is expressed on the outer surface of apoptotic cells, represents a novel adjuvant candidate that may confer significant advantage over existing adjuvants, such as alum. In the current study we assessed the potential of DOPS to serve as an adjuvant in the development of a vaccine against malaria either alone or combined with VLP using Plasmodium falciparum thrombospondin-related adhesive protein (TRAP) as a target antigen. TRAP was chemically coupled to VLPs derived from the cucumber mosaic virus fused to a universal T cell epitope of tetanus toxin (CuMVtt). Mice were immunized with TRAP alone or formulated in alum or DOPS and compared to TRAP coupled to CuMVtt formulated in PBS or DOPS. Induced immune responses, in particular T cell responses, were assessed as the major protective effector cell population induced by TRAP. The protective capacity of the various formulations was assessed using a transgenic Plasmodium berghei expressing PfTRAP. All vaccine formulations using adjuvants and/or VLP increased humoral and T cell immunogenicity for PfTRAP compared to the antigen alone. Display on VLPs, in particular if formulated with DOPS, induced the strongest and most protective immune response. Thus, the combination of VLP with DOPS may harness properties of both immunogenic components and optimally enhance induction of protective immune responses. MDPI 2018-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC6313579/ /pubmed/30469323 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diseases6040107 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cabral-Miranda, Gustavo
M. Salman, Ahmed
O. Mohsen, Mona
L. Storni, Federico
S. Roesti, Elisa
A. Skinner, Murray
D. Heath, Matthew
F. Kramer, Matthias
M. Khan, Shahid
J. Janse, Chris
V. S. Hill, Adrian
F. Bachmann, Martin
DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title_full DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title_fullStr DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title_full_unstemmed DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title_short DOPS Adjuvant Confers Enhanced Protection against Malaria for VLP-TRAP Based Vaccines
title_sort dops adjuvant confers enhanced protection against malaria for vlp-trap based vaccines
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6313579/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30469323
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diseases6040107
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