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Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations

Although aluminium-based vaccines have been used for almost over a century, their mechanism of action remains unclear. It is established that antigen adsorption to the adjuvant facilitates delivery of the antigen to immune cells at the injection site. To further increase our understanding of alumini...

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Autores principales: Laera, Donatello, Scarpellini, Camilla, Tavarini, Simona, Baudner, Barbara, Marcelli, Agnese, Pergola, Carlo, Meppen, Malte, O’Hagan, Derek T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9862877/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36680000
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11010155
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author Laera, Donatello
Scarpellini, Camilla
Tavarini, Simona
Baudner, Barbara
Marcelli, Agnese
Pergola, Carlo
Meppen, Malte
O’Hagan, Derek T.
author_facet Laera, Donatello
Scarpellini, Camilla
Tavarini, Simona
Baudner, Barbara
Marcelli, Agnese
Pergola, Carlo
Meppen, Malte
O’Hagan, Derek T.
author_sort Laera, Donatello
collection PubMed
description Although aluminium-based vaccines have been used for almost over a century, their mechanism of action remains unclear. It is established that antigen adsorption to the adjuvant facilitates delivery of the antigen to immune cells at the injection site. To further increase our understanding of aluminium-based vaccines, it is important to gain additional insights on the interactions between the aluminium and antigens, including antigen distribution over the adjuvant particles. Immuno-assays can further help in this regard. In this paper, we evaluated how established formulation strategies (i.e., sequential, competitive, and separate antigen addition) applied to four different antigens and aluminium oxyhydroxide, lead to formulation changes over time. Results showed that all formulation samples were stable, and that no significant changes were observed in terms of physical-chemical properties. Antigen distribution across the bulk aluminium population, however, did show a maturation effect, with some initial dependence on the formulation approach and the antigen adsorption strength. Sequential and competitive approaches displayed similar results in terms of the homogeneity of antigen distribution across aluminium particles, while separately adsorbed antigens were initially more highly poly-dispersed. Nevertheless, the formulation sample prepared via separate adsorption also reached homogeneity according to each antigen adsorption strength. This study indicated that antigen distribution across aluminium particles is a dynamic feature that evolves over time, which is initially influenced by the formulation approach and the specific adsorption strength, but ultimately leads to homogeneous formulations.
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spelling pubmed-98628772023-01-22 Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations Laera, Donatello Scarpellini, Camilla Tavarini, Simona Baudner, Barbara Marcelli, Agnese Pergola, Carlo Meppen, Malte O’Hagan, Derek T. Vaccines (Basel) Article Although aluminium-based vaccines have been used for almost over a century, their mechanism of action remains unclear. It is established that antigen adsorption to the adjuvant facilitates delivery of the antigen to immune cells at the injection site. To further increase our understanding of aluminium-based vaccines, it is important to gain additional insights on the interactions between the aluminium and antigens, including antigen distribution over the adjuvant particles. Immuno-assays can further help in this regard. In this paper, we evaluated how established formulation strategies (i.e., sequential, competitive, and separate antigen addition) applied to four different antigens and aluminium oxyhydroxide, lead to formulation changes over time. Results showed that all formulation samples were stable, and that no significant changes were observed in terms of physical-chemical properties. Antigen distribution across the bulk aluminium population, however, did show a maturation effect, with some initial dependence on the formulation approach and the antigen adsorption strength. Sequential and competitive approaches displayed similar results in terms of the homogeneity of antigen distribution across aluminium particles, while separately adsorbed antigens were initially more highly poly-dispersed. Nevertheless, the formulation sample prepared via separate adsorption also reached homogeneity according to each antigen adsorption strength. This study indicated that antigen distribution across aluminium particles is a dynamic feature that evolves over time, which is initially influenced by the formulation approach and the specific adsorption strength, but ultimately leads to homogeneous formulations. MDPI 2023-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9862877/ /pubmed/36680000 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11010155 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Laera, Donatello
Scarpellini, Camilla
Tavarini, Simona
Baudner, Barbara
Marcelli, Agnese
Pergola, Carlo
Meppen, Malte
O’Hagan, Derek T.
Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title_full Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title_fullStr Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title_full_unstemmed Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title_short Maturation of Aluminium Adsorbed Antigens Contributes to the Creation of Homogeneous Vaccine Formulations
title_sort maturation of aluminium adsorbed antigens contributes to the creation of homogeneous vaccine formulations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9862877/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36680000
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11010155
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