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Thermoresponsive Polymer Nanoparticles Co-deliver RSV F Trimers with a TLR-7/8 Adjuvant
JR. Francica, GM. Lynn, R. Laga, MG. Joyce, TJ. Ruckwardt, KM. Morabito, M. Chen, R. Chaudhuri, B. Zhang, M. Sastry, A. Druz, K. Ko, M. Choe, M. Pechar, IS. Georgiev, LA. Kueltzo, LW. Seymour, JR. Mascola, PD. Kwong, BS. Graham, RA. Seder,
Language English Country United States
Document type Journal Article
- MeSH
- Adjuvants, Immunologic administration & dosage MeSH
- Mice, Inbred Strains MeSH
- Drug Delivery Systems methods MeSH
- Nanoparticles administration & dosage chemistry MeSH
- Antibodies, Neutralizing MeSH
- Polymers chemistry MeSH
- Viral Fusion Proteins administration & dosage chemistry MeSH
- Vaccines, Synthetic administration & dosage chemistry MeSH
- Chemistry Techniques, Synthetic MeSH
- Toll-Like Receptor 7 agonists MeSH
- Toll-Like Receptor 8 agonists MeSH
- Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccines administration & dosage immunology pharmacology MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Female MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Structure-based vaccine design has been used to develop immunogens that display conserved neutralization sites on pathogens such as HIV-1, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and influenza. Improving the immunogenicity of these designed immunogens with adjuvants will require formulations that do not alter protein antigenicity. Here, we show that nanoparticle-forming thermoresponsive polymers (TRP) allow for co-delivery of RSV fusion (F) protein trimers with Toll-like receptor 7 and 8 agonists (TLR-7/8a) to enhance protective immunity. Although primary amine conjugation of TLR-7/8a to F trimers severely disrupted the recognition of critical neutralizing epitopes, F trimers site-selectively coupled to TRP nanoparticles retained appropriate antigenicity and elicited high titers of prefusion-specific, TH1 isotype anti-RSV F antibodies following vaccination. Moreover, coupling F trimers to TRP delivering TLR-7/8a resulted in ∼3-fold higher binding and neutralizing antibody titers than soluble F trimers admixed with TLR-7/8a and conferred protection from intranasal RSV challenge. Overall, these data show that TRP nanoparticles may provide a broadly applicable platform for eliciting neutralizing antibodies to structure-dependent epitopes on RSV, influenza, HIV-1, or other pathogens.
References provided by Crossref.org
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