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TLR-adjuvanted nanoparticle vaccines differentially influence the quality and longevity of responses to malaria antigen Pfs25
Elizabeth A. Thompson, … , Conlin P. O’Neil, Karin Loré
Elizabeth A. Thompson, … , Conlin P. O’Neil, Karin Loré
Published May 17, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(10):e120692. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.120692.
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Research Article Immunology Vaccines

TLR-adjuvanted nanoparticle vaccines differentially influence the quality and longevity of responses to malaria antigen Pfs25

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Abstract

Transmission-blocking vaccines (TBVs) are considered an integral element of malaria eradication efforts. Despite promising evaluations of Plasmodium falciparum Pfs25-based TBVs in mice, clinical trials have failed to induce robust and long-lived Ab titers, in part due to the poorly immunogenic nature of Pfs25. Using nonhuman primates, we demonstrate that multiple aspects of Pfs25 immunity were enhanced by antigen encapsulation in poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid)–based [(PLGA)-based] synthetic vaccine particles (SVP[Pfs25]) and potent TLR-based adjuvants. SVP[Pfs25] increased Ab titers, Pfs25-specific plasmablasts, circulating memory B cells, and plasma cells in the bone marrow when benchmarked against the clinically tested multimeric form Pfs25-EPA given with GLA-LSQ. SVP[Pfs25] also induced the first reported Pfs25-specific circulating Th1 and Tfh cells to our knowledge. Multivariate correlative analysis indicated several mechanisms for the improved Ab responses. While Pfs25-specific B cells were responsible for increasing Ab titers, T cell responses stimulated increased Ab avidity. The innate immune activation differentially stimulated by the adjuvants revealed a strong correlation between type I IFN polarization, induced by R848 and CpG, and increased Ab half-life and longevity. Collectively, the data identify ways to improve vaccine-induced immunity to poorly immunogenic proteins, both by the choice of antigen and adjuvant formulation, and highlight underlying immunological mechanisms.

Authors

Elizabeth A. Thompson, Sebastian Ols, Kazutoyo Miura, Kelly Rausch, David L. Narum, Mats Spångberg, Michal Juraska, Ulrike Wille-Reece, Amy Weiner, Randall F. Howard, Carole A. Long, Patrick E. Duffy, Lloyd Johnston, Conlin P. O’Neil, Karin Loré

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Figure 2

Immunization induces alteration of cellular populations and cytokine production during innate response.

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Immunization induces alteration of cellular populations and cytokine pro...
(A) Representative gating of peripheral blood immune subsets monitored for innate activity by flow cytometry. (B) Complete blood counts. (C and D) Cell subset frequencies normalized to lymphocyte (C) or monocyte (D) complete blood counts. (E) Differentiation of monocyte populations; classical monocytes (CM), intermediate monocyte (IM), or nonclassical monocytes (NCM) are shown as the percentage of total monocytes (pie charts) or fold change of intermediate monocytes from day 0 to 1 (mean ± SEM). (F) Plasma cytokines increased on day 1 after immunization (mean ± SEM). Groups were compared using 2-way ANOVA. *P ≤ 0.05; **P ≤ 0.01; ***P ≤ 0.001; and ****P ≤ 0.0001.

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