| Literature DB >> 33580048 |
Mario Amacker1, Charli Smardon2, Laura Mason3, Jack Sorrell3, Kirk Jeffery3, Michael Adler4, Farien Bhoelan5, Olga Belova5, Mark Spengler4, Beena Punnamoottil4, Markus Schwaller6, Olivia Bonduelle7, Behazine Combadière7, Toon Stegmann5, Andrew Naylor3, Richard Johnson3, Desmond Wong2, Sylvain Fleury8.
Abstract
The main objective of the MACIVIVA European consortium was to develop new Good Manufacturing Practice pilot lines for manufacturing thermostable vaccines with stabilized antigens on influenza virosomes as enveloped virus-like particles. The HIV-1 gp41-derived antigens anchored in the virosome membrane, along with the adjuvant 3M-052 (TLR7/8 agonist) on the same particle, served as a candidate vaccine for the proof of concept for establishing manufacturing processes, which can be directly applied or adapted to other virosomal vaccines or lipid-based particles. Heat spray-dried powders suitable for nasal or oral delivery, and freeze-dried sublingual tablets were successfully developed as solid dosage forms for mucosal vaccination. The antigenic properties of vaccinal antigens with key gp41 epitopes were maintained, preserving the original immunogenicity of the starting liquid form, and also when solid forms were exposed to high temperature (40 °C) for up to 3 months, with minimal antigen and adjuvant content variation. Virosomes reconstituted from the powder forms remained as free particles with similar size, virosome uptake by antigen-presenting cells in vitro was comparable to virosomes from the liquid form, and the presence of excipients specific to each solid form did not prevent virosome transport to the draining lymph nodes of immunized mice. Virosome integrity was also preserved during exposure to <-15 °C, mimicking accidental freezing conditions. These "ready to use and all-in-one" thermostable needle-free virosomal HIV-1 mucosal vaccines offer the advantage of simplified logistics with a lower dependence on the cold chain during shipments and distribution.Year: 2020 PMID: 33580048 DOI: 10.1038/s41541-020-0190-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Vaccines ISSN: 2059-0105 Impact factor: 7.344