| Literature DB >> 31835350 |
Marcin Pyrski1, Adam Aron Mieloch2,3, Adam Plewiński2, Aneta Basińska-Barczak1, Aleksandra Gryciuk1, Piotr Bociąg1, Marek Murias4, Jakub Dalibor Rybka2, Tomasz Pniewski1.
Abstract
Chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is the cause of severe liver damage, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma for over 240 million people worldwide. Nowadays, several types of treatment are being investigated, including immunotherapy using hepatitis B core antigen (HBcAg) assembled into highly immunogenic capsid-like particles (CLPs). Immunogenicity of plant-produced and purified HBcAg, administered parenterally or intranasally, was previously reported. In this study, a novel parenteral-oral vaccination scheme is proposed using plant-derived HBcAg preparations. The antigen for injection was obtained via transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana. HBcAg-producing transgenic lettuce was lyophilized and used as an orally delivered booster. The intracellular location of plant-produced HBcAg CLPs implies additional protection in the digestive tract during oral immunization. BALB/c mice were intramuscularly primed with 10 µg of the purified antigen and orally boosted twice with 5 or 200 ng of HBcAg. A long-lasting and significant systemic response after boosting with 200 ng HBcAg was induced, with anti-HBc titer of 25,000. Concomitantly, an insignificant mucosal response was observed, with an S-IgA titer of only 500. The profile of IgG isotypes indicates a predominant Th1 type of immune response, supplemented by Th2, after injection-oral vaccination. The results demonstrate that a low dose of parenteral-oral immunization with plant-derived HBcAg can elicit a specific and efficient response. This study presents a potential new pathway of CHB treatment.Entities:
Keywords: HBcAg; IgG isotypes; chronic hepatitis B; immune response; parenteral–oral immunization; plant-derived antigen; therapeutic vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31835350 PMCID: PMC6963566 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines7040211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Production of plant-derived HBcAg: (a) yield of transiently expressed HBcAg; (b) plant tissue expressing HBcAg (left) in comparison to the control (right), arrows indicate sites of particularly large antigen deposition; (c) HBcAg preservation in lyophilized tissue in absolute (µg/g) and relative (percent) units, significant differences marked by small caps letter indexes.
Figure 2Immunogenicity of plant-derived HBcAg administered via intramuscular priming using purified antigen and oral boosting using antigen in lyophilized tissue. Mice in reference groups were given control lyophilisate, while these in the control group were delivered PBS and control lyophilisate. (a) Systemic humoral response, significant anti-HBc titer vs. pre-immune and priming marked by asterisks and hashes, respectively; (b) Anti-HBc IgG profile 16 d after the 2nd oral boosting (day 86) for the group orally boosted 2 × 200 ng HBcAg (significant response) and its reference. Antibody titers expressed as means from three assays of pooled sera (10 or 5 mice per experimental or reference group, respectively). Titers represent the highest dilution of serum required to yield the cut-off, calculated as the mean for pre-immune sera plus tripled SD. Intragroup significant differences indicated by small caps and capitals indexes for the experimental and reference group, respectively. Significant differences for a given IgG isotype between the experimental and reference groups are marked by asterisks; (c) mucosal response-differences were insignificant. Note: results for naïve mice were actually the same as for control; thus, they are not shown for clarity of presentation.