| Literature DB >> 32881121 |
Chao Pan1, Jun Wu1, Shuang Qing2, Xiao Zhang2, Lulu Zhang1, Hua Yue2, Ming Zeng3, Bin Wang3, Zheng Yuan4, Yefeng Qiu4, Huahu Ye4, Dongshu Wang1, Xiankai Liu1, Peng Sun1, Bo Liu1, Erling Feng1, Xiaoyong Gao1, Li Zhu1, Wei Wei2,5, Guanghui Ma2,5, Hengliang Wang1.
Abstract
Recent years have seen enormous advances in nanovaccines for both prophylactic and therapeutic applications, but most of these technologies employ chemical or hybrid semi-biosynthetic production methods. Thus, production of nanovaccines has to date failed to exploit biology-only processes like complex sequential post-translational biochemical modifications and scalability, limiting the realization of the initial promise for offering major performance advantages and improved therapeutic outcomes over conventional vaccines. A Nano-B5 platform for in vivo production of fully protein-based, self-assembling, stable nanovaccines bearing diverse antigens including peptides and polysaccharides is presented here. Combined with the self-assembly capacities of pentamer domains from the bacterial AB5 toxin and unnatural trimer peptides, diverse nanovaccine structures can be produced in common Escherichia coli strains and in attenuated pathogenic strains. Notably, the chassis of these nanovaccines functions as an immunostimulant. After showing excellent lymph node targeting and immunoresponse elicitation and safety performance in both mouse and monkey models, the strong prophylactic effects of these nanovaccines against infection, as well as their efficient therapeutic effects against tumors are further demonstrated. Thus, the Nano-B5 platform can efficiently combine diverse modular components and antigen cargos to efficiently generate a potentially very large diversity of nanovaccine structures using many bacterial species.Entities:
Keywords: AB5 toxins; biosynthesis; conjugate vaccines; nanovaccines; self-assembled proteins
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32881121 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202002940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849