| Literature DB >> 26350599 |
Abstract
Despite the discovery of many potential antigens for subunit vaccines, universal protection is often lacking due to the limitations of conventional delivery methods. Subunit vaccines primarily induce antibody-mediated humoral responses, whereas potent antigen-specific cellular responses are required for prevention against some pathogenic infections. Nanoparticles have been utilised in nanomedicine and are promising candidates for vaccine or drug delivery. Nanoparticle vehicles have been demonstrated to be efficiently taken up by dendritic cells and induce humoral and cellular responses. This review provides an overview of nanoparticle vaccine development; in particular, the preparation of nanoparticles using a templating technique is highlighted, which would alleviate some of the disadvantages of existing nanoparticles. We will also explore the cellular fate of nanoparticle vaccines. Nanoparticle-based antigen delivery systems have the potential to develop new generation vaccines against currently unpreventable infectious diseases.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant; antigen delivery; nanoparticle; templating system
Year: 2015 PMID: 26350599 PMCID: PMC4586471 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines3030638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Number of deaths caused in 2013 by infectious and parasitic diseases for which effective vaccines are not yet available.
| Disease | Number of Reported/Estimated Deaths | Number of Reported/Estimated Cases |
|---|---|---|
| AIDS (HIV) | 1,590,952/- | -/35,000,000 |
| Tuberculosis | -/1,072,678 | 5,725,317/11,468,559 |
| Malaria 1 | 107,225/624,568 | 48,231,939/207,400,000 |
| Hepatitis C | -/425,000 | -/140,000,000 |
| Leishmaniasis 2 | -/25,000 | 213,871/- |
| Schistosomaiasis | 23,313/- | -/300,000 |
| Trypanosomasis 3 | 19,026 4 | 6,314 newly reported/20,000 |
| Ebola virus (2014–2015 outbreak) # | 11,080 | 26,759 |
1 2012 data; 2 Cases of cutaneous leishmaniasis and visceral leishmaniasis combined; 3 Cases for T.b. gambiense and T.b. rhodesiense combined; 4 2011 data; # Ebola outbreak record data up to 10th May 2015 WHO Ebola Situation report [2]. Latest data available from World Health Organization (WHO), Global health observatory data repository [3].
Examples of various types of nanoparticles studied for antigen delivery.
| Category | Nanoparticle Material | Size | Antigen (pathogen) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron Silica | 20–300 nm | MSP1 ( | [ | |
| Cholesterol Lipid Lipid | 200 nm | Polysaccharides ( | [ | |
| Viral capsid expressed in Bacurlovirus Bacteriophage expressed in | 27–60 nm | Capsid protein L1 + L2 (HPV) Capsid protein L2 (HPV) | [ | |
| Chitosan | 160–1000 nm | Hepatitis B | [ | |
| PLGA | Ovalbumin | |||
| PLGA | Tetanus toxoid | |||
| PVPONAlk | Ovalbumin | |||
| γ-PGA | gp120 (HIV-1) |
Figure 1Schematic representation of (a) LbL assembly process, and (b) single step assembly with SC/MS silica template. In LbL assembly, a solid silica nanoparticle (grey) is coated with antigen (blue) by electrostatic interaction, followed by alternate deposition of polymers to create multiple layers by chemical cross-linking (red). The silica nanoparticle template is removed, leaving an antigen containing nanocapsule. In single step assembly, antigen or polymer is infiltrated into the mesoporous matrix (blue) of SC/MS silica nanoparticles (grey with mesh layer). Antigen or polymer is subsequently cross-linked (red), leaving hollow antigen-containing nanocapsules.