| Literature DB >> 34452364 |
Sergio Montaner-Tarbes1, Lorenzo Fraile2, María Montoya3, Hernando Del Portillo1,4.
Abstract
Due to the emergence of antibiotic resistance and new and more complex diseases that affect livestock animal health and food security, the control of epidemics has become a top priority worldwide. Vaccination represents the most important and cost-effective measure to control infectious diseases in animal health, but it represents only 23% of the total global animal health market, highlighting the need to develop new vaccines. A recent strategy in animal health vaccination is the use of extracellular vesicles (EVs), lipid bilayer nanovesicles produced by almost all living cells, including both prokaryotes and eukaryotes. EVs have been evaluated as a prominent source of viral antigens to elicit specific immune responses and to develop new vaccination platforms as viruses and EVs share biogenesis pathways. Preliminary trials with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection (LCMV), porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV), and Marek's disease virus (MDV) have demonstrated that EVs have a role in the activation of cellular and antibody immune responses. Moreover, in parasitic diseases such as Eimeria (chickens) and Plasmodium yoelii (mice) protection has been achieved. Research into EVs is therefore opening an opportunity for new strategies to overcome old problems affecting food security, animal health, and emerging diseases. Here, we review different conventional approaches for vaccine design and compare them with examples of EV-based vaccines that have already been tested in relation to animal health.Entities:
Keywords: extracellular vesicles; vaccines; viral diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34452364 PMCID: PMC8402771 DOI: 10.3390/v13081499
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Features, advantages and disadvantages of available vaccination approaches for animal viral diseases.
| Vaccine Strategy | Starting Material | Require Adjuvant | Reversion to Virulence | Immunogenicity | Type of Immune Response | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Live attenuated | Attenuated pathogen | Usually No | Possible | +++ | Th1 and Th2 | All antigens are in the original conformation | Could revert to virulent state | [ |
| Loss of virulent factors and conserve immunogenicity | Genetic instability | |||||||
| Could be attenuated using mutagenic compounds | Loss of replication capacity, causing loss of immunogenicity | |||||||
| Wider presentation of antigens | Could spread to contacts due to replication | |||||||
| Different routes of administration including the natural ones | DIVA is difficult, as vaccinated and infected animals share similar antibodies | |||||||
| Affordable costs for veterinary pharmaceutical companies | ||||||||
| Inactivated and subunit vaccines | Peptides or proteins | Usually Yes | N/A | ++ | Mainly Th2 in most cases | Easy to produce at large scale (cost efficient) | Identification of protective epitopes takes time | [ |
| Can be produced in different expression systems | Usually need adjuvant | |||||||
| Well-defined composition | Requires boosting | |||||||
| Primary immune responses (as well as cellular and antibody responses) | Usually weak immune responses. | |||||||
| Vectored vaccines | Genes encoding protective antigens | Usually No | N/A | ++ | Th1 and Th2 | Production of the antigen in the cell of interest directly | Sometimes, there is pre-existing immunity against the viral vector | [ |
| Very stable | Small genome size and need of helper virus during propagation in adenoviral vectors | |||||||
| Not adjuvanted | Poor immunity in some cases | |||||||
| Allows one to differentiate vaccinated from infected (DIVA) | Boosting required for full protection | |||||||
| Limited replicative capacity | Genetically considered modified organisms and potential health risk | |||||||
| Multiple epitopes can be included | ||||||||
| Nanovaccines (carriers) | Proteins or peptides and immunogenic carriers | Yes | N/A | +++ | Possibly Th1 and Th2; further studies required | Protects the antigen and increases its immunogenic capacity | Identification of carriers to trigger specific immune responses | [ |
| Allow antigen delivery using the mucosal route of immunization | For PGLA particles: low loading efficiency, hydrophobicity, fast burst release, high manufacturing cost, and scale-up difficulty | |||||||
| Scalable production of VLPs | Liposomes have low antigen loading and poor stability | |||||||
| Extracellular vesicles | Production of EVs from infected cells or producer cells | Not known | N/A | Need to be further studied | Possibly Th1 and Th2; further studies required | The cargo reflects the cell of origin | Production and scalability are difficult | [ |
| Are able to self-present antigens (MHC molecules in their surface) | Antigen identification in samples needs further research | |||||||
| Can generate protective immune responses | Characterization of immune responses for each particular disease needs further research | |||||||
| Can be useful for different kind of diseases from cancer to infectious diseases | There is no clear regulatory frame (EMA/FDA) to move from research to industrial production and commercialization | |||||||
| Are able to pass the blood–brain barrier |
Figure 1Key gaps in knowledge to be filled for the use of EVs as vaccines.