| Literature DB >> 33643549 |
Ilaria Zanella1, Enrico König1, Michele Tomasi1, Assunta Gagliardi1, Luca Frattini1, Laura Fantappiè2, Carmela Irene1, Francesca Zerbini1, Elena Caproni1, Samine J Isaac1, Martina Grigolato1, Riccardo Corbellari1, Silvia Valensin2, Ilaria Ferlenghi3, Fabiola Giusti3, Luca Bini4, Yaqoub Ashhab5, Alberto Grandi2,6, Guido Grandi1.
Abstract
Because of their potent adjuvanticity, ease of manipulation and simplicity of production Gram-negative Outer Membrane Vesicles OMVs have the potential to become a highly effective vaccine platform. However, some optimization is required, including the reduction of the number of endogenous proteins, the increase of the loading capacity with respect to heterologous antigens, the enhancement of productivity in terms of number of vesicles per culture volume. In this work we describe the use of Synthetic Biology to create Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)Δ60, a strain releasing OMVs (OMVsΔ60) deprived of 59 endogenous proteins. The strain produces large quantities of vesicles (> 40 mg/L under laboratory conditions), which can accommodate recombinant proteins to a level ranging from 5% to 30% of total OMV proteins. Moreover, also thanks to the absence of immune responses toward the inactivated endogenous proteins, OMVsΔ60 decorated with heterologous antigens/epitopes elicit elevated antigens/epitopes-specific antibody titers and high frequencies of epitope-specific IFN-γ-producing CD8+ T cells. Altogether, we believe that E. coli BL21(DE3)Δ60 have the potential to become a workhorse factory for novel OMV-based vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; infectious diseases; outer membrane vesicles (OMVs); synthetic biology; vaccines
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33643549 PMCID: PMC7886703 DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Extracell Vesicles ISSN: 2001-3078