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50-Fold Adjuvant and 20-Fold Antigen Vaccine Dose Sparing from Nanoliposome Display of a Stabilized Malarial Protein Antigen

  • Yiting Song
  • , Wei Chiao Huang
  • , Danton Ivanochko
  • , Carole Long
  • , Qinzhe Li
  • , Luwen Zhou
  • , Jean Philippe Julien
  • , Kazutoyo Miura
  • , Jonathan F. Lovell
  • SUNY Buffalo
  • University of Toronto
  • National Institutes of Health

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Displaying soluble vaccine protein antigens onto the surface of adjuvanted nanoliposomes can enhance the magnitude of elicited antibody responses. In this study, we examine this approach with respect to dose sparing, for not only the antigen component but also the adjuvant dose in the vaccine. Using a structurally stabilized Pfs48/45 derived malarial protein as a model antigen, we confirmed the protein rapidly displayed on the surface of immunogenic liposomes containing cobalt porphyrin phospholipid (CoPoP; for antigen display via His-tag interaction) along with the immunostimulatory adjuvants monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA) and QS-21. Mice were immunized with a fixed protein antigen dose with varying adjuvant doses to estimate the extent of adjuvant sparing. In mice vaccinated at a fixed protein antigen dose, liposome-bound Pfs48/45 achieved superior antibody IgG titers compared to the soluble (nonbound) form at all assessed adjuvant doses, reflecting MPLA and QS-21 adjuvant dose sparing of at least 50-fold. The primary driver of adjuvant sparing in these conditions was presentation of the antigen in a nanoparticle format, and potent responses were achieved even without co-delivery of antigen and adjuvant within the same particle, provided that adjuvant and liposome-displayed antigen were co-administered to the same injection site. By keeping the adjuvant dose fixed and varying the antigen dose in a comparable experimental design, ∼20-fold antigen dose sparing was observed with liposome display. This case study illustrates the potential of antigen-display nanotechnologies, such as CoPoP nanoliposomes, to achieve substantial adjuvant and antigen dose sparing, which could theoretically facilitate the deployment of future vaccines.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10103-10112
Number of pages10
JournalACS Nano
Volume19
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 18 2025

Keywords

  • Adjuvant Sparing
  • Antigen Sparing
  • Liposome
  • Malaria
  • Vaccine

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