| Literature DB >> 26188153 |
María F Sánchez Vallecillo1, María M Minguito de la Escalera2, María V Aguirre1, Gabriela V Ullio Gamboa3, Santiago D Palma3, Leticia González-Cintado2, Ana L Chiodetti1, Germán Soldano4, Gabriel Morón1, Daniel A Allemandi3, Carlos Ardavín2, María C Pistoresi-Palencia1, Belkys A Maletto5.
Abstract
Modern subunit vaccines require the development of new adjuvant strategies. Recently, we showed that CpG-ODN formulated with a liquid crystal nanostructure formed by self-assembly of 6-O-ascorbyl palmitate (Coa-ASC16) is an attractive system for promoting an antigen-specific immune response to weak antigens. Here, we showed that after subcutaneous injection of mice with near-infrared fluorescent dye-labeled OVA antigen formulated with Coa-ASC16, the dye-OVA was retained at the injection site for a longer period than when soluble dye-OVA was administered. Coa-ASC16 alone elicited a local inflammation, but how this material triggers this response has not been described yet. Although it is known that some materials used as a platform are not immunologically inert, very few studies have directly focused on this topic. In this study, we explored the underlying mechanisms concerning the interaction between Coa-ASC16 and the immune system and we found that the whole inflammatory response elicited by Coa-ASC16 (leukocyte recruitment and IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-12 production) was dependent on the MyD88 protein. TLR2, TLR4, TLR7 and NLRP3-inflammasome signaling were not required for induction of this inflammatory response. Coa-ASC16 induced local release of self-DNA, and in TLR9-deficient mice IL-6 production was absent. In addition, Coa-ASC16 revealed an intrinsic adjuvant activity which was affected by MyD88 and IL-6 absence. Taken together these results indicate that Coa-ASC16 used as a vaccine platform is effective due to the combination of the controlled release of antigen and its intrinsic pro-inflammatory activity. Understanding how Coa-ASC16 works might have significant implications for rational vaccine design.Entities:
Keywords: Ascorbyl palmitate; Controlled release; Danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs); Liquid crystal; Nanostructure; Vaccine adjuvant
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26188153 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2015.07.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776