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Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate

Developing a safe and effective malaria vaccine is critical to reducing the spread and resurgence of this deadly disease, especially in children. In recent years, vaccine technology has seen expanded development of subunit protein, peptide, and nucleic acid vaccines. This is due to their inherent sa...

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Autores principales: Xu, Yang, Zhou, Ziyou, Brooks, Brad, Ferguson, Tammy, Obliosca, Judy, Huang, Jing, Kaneko, Izumi, Iwanaga, Shiroh, Yuda, Masao, Tsuji, Yukiko, Zhang, Huitang, Luo, Christina C., Jiang, Xunqing, Kong, Xiang-Peng, Tsuji, Moriya, Tison, Christopher K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9428560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36059505
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.900080
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author Xu, Yang
Zhou, Ziyou
Brooks, Brad
Ferguson, Tammy
Obliosca, Judy
Huang, Jing
Kaneko, Izumi
Iwanaga, Shiroh
Yuda, Masao
Tsuji, Yukiko
Zhang, Huitang
Luo, Christina C.
Jiang, Xunqing
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Tsuji, Moriya
Tison, Christopher K.
author_facet Xu, Yang
Zhou, Ziyou
Brooks, Brad
Ferguson, Tammy
Obliosca, Judy
Huang, Jing
Kaneko, Izumi
Iwanaga, Shiroh
Yuda, Masao
Tsuji, Yukiko
Zhang, Huitang
Luo, Christina C.
Jiang, Xunqing
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Tsuji, Moriya
Tison, Christopher K.
author_sort Xu, Yang
collection PubMed
description Developing a safe and effective malaria vaccine is critical to reducing the spread and resurgence of this deadly disease, especially in children. In recent years, vaccine technology has seen expanded development of subunit protein, peptide, and nucleic acid vaccines. This is due to their inherent safety, the ability to tailor their immune response, simple storage requirements, easier production, and lower expense compared to using attenuated and inactivated organism-based approaches. However, these new vaccine technologies generally have low efficacy. Subunit vaccines, due to their weak immunogenicity, often necessitate advanced delivery vectors and/or the use of adjuvants. A new area of vaccine development involves design of synthetic micro- and nano-particles and adjuvants that can stimulate immune cells directly through their physical and chemical properties. Further, the unique and complex life cycle of the Plasmodium organism, with multiple stages and varying epitopes/antigens presented by the parasite, is another challenge for malaria vaccine development. Targeting multistage antigens simultaneously is therefore critical for an effective malaria vaccine. Here, we rationally design a layer-by-layer (LbL) antigen delivery platform (we called LbL NP) specifically engineered for malaria vaccines. A biocompatible modified chitosan nanoparticle (trimethyl chitosan, TMC) was synthesized and utilized for LbL loading and release of multiple malaria antigens from pre-erythrocytic and erythrocytic stages. LbL NP served as antigen/protein delivery vehicles and were demonstrated to induce the highest Plasmodium falciparum Circumsporozoite Protein (PfCSP) specific T-cell responses in mice studies as compared to multiple controls. From immunogenicity studies, it was concluded that two doses of intramuscular injection with a longer interval (4 weeks) than traditional malaria vaccine candidate dosing would be the vaccination potential for LbL NP vaccine candidates. Furthermore, in PfCSP/Py parasite challenge studies we demonstrated protective efficacy using LbL NP. These LbL NP provided a significant adjuvant effect since they may induce innate immune response that led to a potent adaptive immunity to mediate non-specific anti-malarial effect. Most importantly, the delivery of CSP full-length protein stimulated long-lasting protective immune responses even after the booster immunization 4 weeks later in mice.
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spelling pubmed-94285602022-09-01 Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate Xu, Yang Zhou, Ziyou Brooks, Brad Ferguson, Tammy Obliosca, Judy Huang, Jing Kaneko, Izumi Iwanaga, Shiroh Yuda, Masao Tsuji, Yukiko Zhang, Huitang Luo, Christina C. Jiang, Xunqing Kong, Xiang-Peng Tsuji, Moriya Tison, Christopher K. Front Immunol Immunology Developing a safe and effective malaria vaccine is critical to reducing the spread and resurgence of this deadly disease, especially in children. In recent years, vaccine technology has seen expanded development of subunit protein, peptide, and nucleic acid vaccines. This is due to their inherent safety, the ability to tailor their immune response, simple storage requirements, easier production, and lower expense compared to using attenuated and inactivated organism-based approaches. However, these new vaccine technologies generally have low efficacy. Subunit vaccines, due to their weak immunogenicity, often necessitate advanced delivery vectors and/or the use of adjuvants. A new area of vaccine development involves design of synthetic micro- and nano-particles and adjuvants that can stimulate immune cells directly through their physical and chemical properties. Further, the unique and complex life cycle of the Plasmodium organism, with multiple stages and varying epitopes/antigens presented by the parasite, is another challenge for malaria vaccine development. Targeting multistage antigens simultaneously is therefore critical for an effective malaria vaccine. Here, we rationally design a layer-by-layer (LbL) antigen delivery platform (we called LbL NP) specifically engineered for malaria vaccines. A biocompatible modified chitosan nanoparticle (trimethyl chitosan, TMC) was synthesized and utilized for LbL loading and release of multiple malaria antigens from pre-erythrocytic and erythrocytic stages. LbL NP served as antigen/protein delivery vehicles and were demonstrated to induce the highest Plasmodium falciparum Circumsporozoite Protein (PfCSP) specific T-cell responses in mice studies as compared to multiple controls. From immunogenicity studies, it was concluded that two doses of intramuscular injection with a longer interval (4 weeks) than traditional malaria vaccine candidate dosing would be the vaccination potential for LbL NP vaccine candidates. Furthermore, in PfCSP/Py parasite challenge studies we demonstrated protective efficacy using LbL NP. These LbL NP provided a significant adjuvant effect since they may induce innate immune response that led to a potent adaptive immunity to mediate non-specific anti-malarial effect. Most importantly, the delivery of CSP full-length protein stimulated long-lasting protective immune responses even after the booster immunization 4 weeks later in mice. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9428560/ /pubmed/36059505 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.900080 Text en Copyright © 2022 Xu, Zhou, Brooks, Ferguson, Obliosca, Huang, Kaneko, Iwanaga, Yuda, Tsuji, Zhang, Luo, Jiang, Kong, Tsuji and Tison https://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
Xu, Yang
Zhou, Ziyou
Brooks, Brad
Ferguson, Tammy
Obliosca, Judy
Huang, Jing
Kaneko, Izumi
Iwanaga, Shiroh
Yuda, Masao
Tsuji, Yukiko
Zhang, Huitang
Luo, Christina C.
Jiang, Xunqing
Kong, Xiang-Peng
Tsuji, Moriya
Tison, Christopher K.
Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title_full Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title_fullStr Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title_full_unstemmed Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title_short Layer-by-Layer Delivery of Multiple Antigens Using Trimethyl Chitosan Nanoparticles as a Malaria Vaccine Candidate
title_sort layer-by-layer delivery of multiple antigens using trimethyl chitosan nanoparticles as a malaria vaccine candidate
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9428560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36059505
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.900080
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