| Literature DB >> 26343190 |
Alberta Di Pasquale1, Scott Preiss2, Fernanda Tavares Da Silva3, Nathalie Garçon4.
Abstract
The concept of stimulating the body's immune response is the basis underlying vaccination. Vaccines act by initiating the innate immune response and activating antigen presenting cells (APCs), thereby inducing a protective adaptive immune response to a pathogen antigen. Adjuvants are substances added to vaccines to enhance the immunogenicity of highly purified antigens that have insufficient immunostimulatory capabilities, and have been used in human vaccines for more than 90 years. While early adjuvants (aluminum, oil-in-water emulsions) were used empirically, rapidly increasing knowledge on how the immune system interacts with pathogens means that there is increased understanding of the role of adjuvants and how the formulation of modern vaccines can be better tailored towards the desired clinical benefit. Continuing safety evaluation of licensed vaccines containing adjuvants/adjuvant systems suggests that their individual benefit-risk profile remains favorable. Adjuvants contribute to the initiation of the innate immune response induced by antigens; exemplified by inflammatory responses at the injection site, with mostly localized and short-lived effects. Activated effectors (such as APCs) then move to draining lymph nodes where they direct the type, magnitude and quality of the adaptive immune response. Thus, the right match of antigens and adjuvants can potentiate downstream adaptive immune responses, enabling the development of new efficacious vaccines. Many infectious diseases of worldwide significance are not currently preventable by vaccination. Adjuvants are the most advanced new technology in the search for new vaccines against challenging pathogens and for vulnerable populations that respond poorly to traditional vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive immune response; adjuvant; immune response; immunogenicity; innate immune response; safety; vaccine
Year: 2015 PMID: 26343190 PMCID: PMC4494348 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines3020320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Balancing immunogenicity and tolerability.
Figure 2The role of the innate immune response.
Figure 3Licensed vaccines with or without adjuvant.
Figure 4The immune response to vaccination with and without adjuvant.
Figure 5Challenges for modern vaccine development.
Characteristics of adjuvants used in licensed vaccines.
| Adjuvant | Composition | Major Immune Effects | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (vaccines where used) | ||||
| Aluminum as salts mixed with antigen (adsorption) | Naturally occurring present in soil, water, air | Medicines, cosmetics, food industry | Increases local inflammation, improves antigen update by APCs. Acts to increase antibody production | |
| Vesicles where influenza antigens in aqueous volume are enclosed within a standard phospholipid cell membrane bilayer | Natural phospholipids, Seasonal influenza glycoproteins | None | Increases uptake by APCs. May interact with B cells leading to T-cell activation. | |
| (3-deacyl-monophosphoryl lipid A) derived from LPS from | Natural exposure to LPS from Gram-negative bacteria occurs frequently | None | Directly stimulates TLR-4 increasing APC maturation and Th1 responses. | |
| Squalene | Animal source (shark liver oil). Found naturally in human tissues: adipose tissues, skin, arterial walls, skeleton, muscles, lymph nodes | Cosmetics, moisturizers | Increases APC recruitment and activation. Promotes antigen uptake and migration of cells to lymph nodes. | |
Vitamin E (α-Tocopherol) Surfactant polysorbate 80 Squalene | Naturally occurring in humans. Surfactant and emulsifier Animal source (shark liver oil). See above | Vitamin Used in foods, eye drops & intravenous injections Naturally occurring. See above | Promotes local production of cytokines and recruitment of innate cells. | |
| Squalene | Animal source (shark liver oil). See above | Naturally occurring. See above | Not reported | |
| Mineral oil DRAKEOL 6 VR Surfactant mannide-mono-oleate | Refined mineral oil of vegetable origin | Food industry | Strongly immunogenic | |
D = diphtheria, T = tetanus, IPV = inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine, HPV = human papilloma virus, LPS = lipopolysaccharide, APC = antigen presenting cells, TLR = toll-like receptor, NSCLC = non-small cell lung cancer, MPL = monophosphoryl lipid A.
Figure 6Characterization of safety from the laboratory to licensure and beyond