| Literature DB >> 32927471 |
Dheeraj Soni1,2, Sharan Bobbala3, Sophia Li3, Evan A Scott3, David J Dowling4,5.
Abstract
Infection is the predominant cause of mortality in early life, and immunization is the most promising biomedical intervention to reduce this burden. However, very young infants fail to respond optimally to most vaccines currently in use, especially neonates. In 2005, Stanley Plotkin proposed that new delivery systems would spur a new revolution in pediatric vaccinology, just as attenuation, inactivation, cell culture of viruses, genetic engineering, and adjuvantation had done in preceding decades. Recent advances in the field of immunoengineering, which is evolving alongside vaccinology, have begun to increasingly influence vaccine formulation design. Historically, the particulate nature of materials used in many vaccine formulations was empiric, often because of the need to stabilize antigens or reduce endotoxin levels. However, present vaccine delivery systems are rationally engineered to mimic the size, shape, and surface chemistry of pathogens, and are therefore often referred to as "pathogen-like particles". More than a decade from his original assessment, we re-assess Plotkin's prediction. In addition, we highlight how immunoengineering and advanced delivery systems may be uniquely capable of enhancing vaccine responses in vulnerable populations, such as infants. IMPACT: Immunoengineering and advanced delivery systems are leading to new developments in pediatric vaccinology. Summarizes delivery systems currently in use and development, and prospects for the future. Broad overview of immunoengineering's impact on vaccinology, catering to Pediatric Clinicians and Immunologists.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32927471 PMCID: PMC7511675 DOI: 10.1038/s41390-020-01112-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.756
Fig. 1The five revolutions in vaccinology.
Attenuation: 1800s onwards; live attenuated smallpox, rabies, tuberculosis (BCG), yellow fever, polio (oral polio vaccine (OPV)) vaccines. Inactivation: 1880s onwards; killed vaccines for typhoid, cholera, whole-cell pertussis, influenza, polio (inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)). Cell culture of viruses: 1950s; of the cornucopia of live vaccines made possible by passage in cell culture, the work by Enders, Robbins, and Weller lead to the Salk and Sabin polio vaccines. Genetic engineering: 1980s: Hepatitis B vaccine (HBV), the first recombinant-antigen-based vaccine, incorporated the viral surface proteins, derived from molecular biology production. Methods to induce cellular immune responses: 2000s; driving the immune system in the T helper 1 direction with stimuli such as vectors and adjuvants.
Fig. 2Candidates for the sixth revolution in vaccinology.
Combination vaccines: simultaneous administration of vaccines to target multiple diseases. The adjuvant toolbox: ranging from small-molecule adjuvants to combination adjuvants. Vaccines for non-infectious diseases: new treatments for tumors, allergy, or non-infectious disorders (e.g., prevention of drug overdose). Systems vaccinology: Systems biology approaches to identify predictors of vaccine efficacy and explore new insights about protective immunity. Reverse vaccinology: Bioinformatics aided vaccine design from pathogenic genetics. Immunoengineering and delivery systems: Delivering precise materials for specific activation of immune system (right time, right place, right size, right shape, etc.).
Fig. 3Recent advances in vaccine design technologies enabled by novel delivery systems.
DNA: Plasmid contains DNA sequences encoding the pathogenic antigen(s). RNA: mRNA strand encodes for pathogenic antigen(s). Virus-like particles: multiprotein structures mimicking pathogenic virus however lacking their genome. Broadly neutralizing Abs: target conserved epitopes of the pathogen, regardless of mutation in pathogen (e.g. passive immunization with Palivizumab (RSV treatment)). Antigen display and delivery: antigen presentation on self-assembing nanoparticles to enhance humoral responses (e.g. multivalent display, co-display, immunomodulation, and genetic delivery). Structure-guided antigen design: structural manipulations of vaccine antigens (e.g. conformational stabilization, epitope focusing, epitope scaffolding, and antigenicity modification). Recombinant bacteria: recombinant bacterial vector/bacteria carries pieces of the pathogen. Viral vector: recombinant viral vector/another virus carries pieces of the pathogen.
Potential uses and benefits of “novel delivery systems” to future early life vaccination strategies.
| • Instruct an accelerated, targeted, potent, and durable immune response in humans against pathogens (e.g. overcome pathogen diversity and immune evasion) |
| • Allow for dose sparing and reduced vaccine manufacturing costs, thereby increasing the global access to pediatric vaccines |
| • Dramatically increase the number of antigens per formulation/immunization |
| • Modulation of antigen delivery and persistence (i.e., single bolus vs. slow release formulations) |
| • Act as immunomodulators to enhance Th (e.g., T helper 1 [Th1] cell versus Th2) or achieve qualitative alteration of the immune response (CD8+ versus CD4+ T cells) |
| • Allow cell-mediated T cell vaccination strategies |
| • Capture synergy by using different adjuvant combinations |
| • Allow dendritic cell (and DC subset) targeting |
| • Reduce number of immunizations (possibly to even a single dose) |
| • Reduce reactogenicity and improve safety with age-optimized formulations |
| • Locally and specifically circumvent suppressive innate immune ontogeny |
| • Enhance potential of therapeutic vaccines for early life allergies and chronic infectious diseases |
| • Modulate maternal immune system effects and/or microbiome on infant vaccine responses early in life |
| • Expand the efficacy of licensed vaccines to neonates and preterm infants |
| • Develop dedicated vaccines for pregnant women |
| • Broaden administration route options, such as neonatal mucosal vaccination |
| • Broader vaccination for immunocompromised populations |
| • Reduce human reservoirs of infectious diseases, by improving vaccines designed for the elderly |
| • Polarize maternal responses to minimize interference with infant response to subsequent vaccination or infection |
| • Induction of un-natural immunity (i.e., broadly protective universal vaccines) |
| • Instruct heterologous immunity, thereby reducing overall mortality rates |