| Literature DB >> 28077601 |
Annett Ziegler1, Claudia Soldner1, Stefan Lienenklaus1,2,3, Julia Spanier1, Stephanie Trittel4, Peggy Riese4, Thomas Kramps5, Siegfried Weiss2, Regina Heidenreich5, Edith Jasny5, Carlos A Guzmán4, Karl-Josef Kallen5, Mariola Fotin-Mleczek5, Ulrich Kalinke6.
Abstract
Among innovative adjuvants conferring a Th1-shift, RNAdjuvant is a promising candidate. This adjuvant consists of a 547-nt uncapped noncoding ssRNA containing polyU repeats that is stabilized by a cationic carrier peptide. Whereas vaccination of mice with an influenza subunit vaccine induced moderate virus-specific IgG1, vaccination together with RNAdjuvant significantly enhanced this IgG1 and additionally promoted the formation of IgG2b/c, which is indicative of Th1 responses. Furthermore, such sera neutralized influenza virus, whereas this effect was not detected upon vaccination with the subunit vaccine alone. Similarly, upon vaccination with virus-like particles displaying vesicular stomatitis virus G protein, RNAdjuvant promoted the formation of virus-specific IgG2b/c and enhanced neutralizing IgG responses to an extent that mice were protected against lethal virus infection. RNAdjuvant induced dendritic cells to upregulate activation markers and produce IFN-I. Although these effects were strictly TLR7 dependent, RNAdjuvant-mediated augmentation of vaccine responses needed concurrent TLR and RIG-I-like helicase signaling. This was indicated by the absence of the adjuvant effect in vaccinated MyD88-/-Cardif-/- mice, which are devoid of TLR (with the exception of TLR3) and RIG-I-like helicase signaling, whereas in vaccinated MyD88-/- mice the adjuvant effect was reduced. Notably, i.m. RNAdjuvant injection induced local IFN-I responses and did not induce systemic effects, implying good tolerability and a favorable safety profile for RNAdjuvant.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28077601 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1601129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422