| Literature DB >> 35610892 |
Raquel Gracia1, Marco Marradi1, Gianluca Salerno2, Rocmira Pérez-Nicado3, Adrián Pérez-San Vicente1, Damien Dupin1, Javier Rodriguez1, Iraida Loinaz1, Fabrizio Chiodo4,5, Cristina Nativi2.
Abstract
The "pancarcinoma" Tn antigen (αGalNAc-O-Ser/Thr) is a tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen (TACA) overexpressed on the surface of cancer cells and suitable target for anticancer vaccines. However, TACAs commonly show weak immunogenicity, low in vivo stability, and poor bioavailability. To address these issues, the development of physiologically stable TACA synthetic mimetics and novel nanocarriers for multivalent display are object of intense research. Nanomaterials represent suitable scaffolds to multimerize antigens, but absence of toxicity, easy functionalization and capability to incorporate biomolecules are compulsory characteristics for vaccine nanocarriers. Here, we report on the conjugation of a synthetic Tn-antigen mimetic to biocompatible and water-dispersible dextran-based single-chain nanoparticles (DXT-SCPNs). In vitro stimulation of PBMCs and analysis of interleukins production indicated a specific innate immune modulation mediated by the multivalent presentation of the Tn mimetic at the nanoparticle surface. These preliminary results pave the way for the development of Tn-mimetic clusters on biocompatible DXT-SCPN for TACA-based vaccines.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35610892 DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.8b00052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Macro Lett ISSN: 2161-1653 Impact factor: 6.903