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β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs

The mechanisms of trained immunity have been extensively described in vitro and the beneficial effects are starting to be deciphered in in vivo settings. Prototypical compounds inducing trained immunity, such as β-glucans, act through epigenetic reprogramming and metabolic changes of innate immune c...

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Autores principales: Paris, Simon, Chapat, Ludivine, Martin-Cagnon, Nathalie, Durand, Pierre-Yves, Piney, Lauriane, Cariou, Carine, Bergamo, Pierre, Bonnet, Jeanne-Marie, Poulet, Hervé, Freyburger, Ludovic, De Luca, Karelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7580252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33162977
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.564497
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author Paris, Simon
Chapat, Ludivine
Martin-Cagnon, Nathalie
Durand, Pierre-Yves
Piney, Lauriane
Cariou, Carine
Bergamo, Pierre
Bonnet, Jeanne-Marie
Poulet, Hervé
Freyburger, Ludovic
De Luca, Karelle
author_facet Paris, Simon
Chapat, Ludivine
Martin-Cagnon, Nathalie
Durand, Pierre-Yves
Piney, Lauriane
Cariou, Carine
Bergamo, Pierre
Bonnet, Jeanne-Marie
Poulet, Hervé
Freyburger, Ludovic
De Luca, Karelle
author_sort Paris, Simon
collection PubMed
description The mechanisms of trained immunity have been extensively described in vitro and the beneficial effects are starting to be deciphered in in vivo settings. Prototypical compounds inducing trained immunity, such as β-glucans, act through epigenetic reprogramming and metabolic changes of innate immune cells. The recent advances in this field have opened new areas for the development of Trained immunity-based adjuvants (TIbAs). In this study, we assessed in dogs the potential immune training effects of β-glucans as well as their capacity to enhance the adaptive immune response of an inactivated rabies vaccine (Rabisin(®)). Injection of β-glucan from Euglena gracilis was performed 1 month before vaccination with Rabisin(®) supplemented or not with the same β-glucan used as adjuvant. Trained innate immunity parameters were assessed during the first month of the trial. The second phase of the study was focused on the ability of β-glucan to enhance adaptive immune responses measured by multiple immunological parameters. B and T-cell specific responses were monitored to evaluate the immunogenicity of the rabies vaccine adjuvanted with β-glucan or not. Our preliminary results support that adjuvantation of Rabisin(®) vaccine with β-glucan elicit a higher B-lymphocyte immune response, the prevailing factor of protection against rabies. β-glucan also tend to stimulate the T cell response as shown by the cytokine secretion profile of PBMCs re-stimulated ex vivo. Our data are providing new insights on the impact of trained immunity on the adaptive immune response to vaccines in dogs. The administration of β-glucan, 1 month before or simultaneously to Rabisin(®) vaccination give promising results for the generation of new TIbA candidates and their potential to provide increased immunogenicity of specific vaccines.
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spelling pubmed-75802522020-11-05 β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs Paris, Simon Chapat, Ludivine Martin-Cagnon, Nathalie Durand, Pierre-Yves Piney, Lauriane Cariou, Carine Bergamo, Pierre Bonnet, Jeanne-Marie Poulet, Hervé Freyburger, Ludovic De Luca, Karelle Front Immunol Immunology The mechanisms of trained immunity have been extensively described in vitro and the beneficial effects are starting to be deciphered in in vivo settings. Prototypical compounds inducing trained immunity, such as β-glucans, act through epigenetic reprogramming and metabolic changes of innate immune cells. The recent advances in this field have opened new areas for the development of Trained immunity-based adjuvants (TIbAs). In this study, we assessed in dogs the potential immune training effects of β-glucans as well as their capacity to enhance the adaptive immune response of an inactivated rabies vaccine (Rabisin(®)). Injection of β-glucan from Euglena gracilis was performed 1 month before vaccination with Rabisin(®) supplemented or not with the same β-glucan used as adjuvant. Trained innate immunity parameters were assessed during the first month of the trial. The second phase of the study was focused on the ability of β-glucan to enhance adaptive immune responses measured by multiple immunological parameters. B and T-cell specific responses were monitored to evaluate the immunogenicity of the rabies vaccine adjuvanted with β-glucan or not. Our preliminary results support that adjuvantation of Rabisin(®) vaccine with β-glucan elicit a higher B-lymphocyte immune response, the prevailing factor of protection against rabies. β-glucan also tend to stimulate the T cell response as shown by the cytokine secretion profile of PBMCs re-stimulated ex vivo. Our data are providing new insights on the impact of trained immunity on the adaptive immune response to vaccines in dogs. The administration of β-glucan, 1 month before or simultaneously to Rabisin(®) vaccination give promising results for the generation of new TIbA candidates and their potential to provide increased immunogenicity of specific vaccines. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7580252/ /pubmed/33162977 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.564497 Text en Copyright © 2020 Paris, Chapat, Martin-Cagnon, Durand, Piney, Cariou, Bergamo, Bonnet, Poulet, Freyburger and De Luca http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Paris, Simon
Chapat, Ludivine
Martin-Cagnon, Nathalie
Durand, Pierre-Yves
Piney, Lauriane
Cariou, Carine
Bergamo, Pierre
Bonnet, Jeanne-Marie
Poulet, Hervé
Freyburger, Ludovic
De Luca, Karelle
β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title_full β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title_fullStr β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title_full_unstemmed β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title_short β-Glucan as Trained Immunity-Based Adjuvants for Rabies Vaccines in Dogs
title_sort β-glucan as trained immunity-based adjuvants for rabies vaccines in dogs
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7580252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33162977
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.564497
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