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Vaccine delivery alerts innate immune systems for more immunogenic vaccination
Zhuofan Li, Yan Cao, Yibo Li, Yiwen Zhao, Xinyuan Chen
Zhuofan Li, Yan Cao, Yibo Li, Yiwen Zhao, Xinyuan Chen
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Research Article Vaccines

Vaccine delivery alerts innate immune systems for more immunogenic vaccination

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Abstract

Vaccine delivery technologies are mainly designed to minimally invasively deliver vaccines to target tissues with little or no adjuvant effects. This study presents a prototype laser-based powder delivery (LPD) with inherent adjuvant effects for more immunogenic vaccination without incorporation of external adjuvants. LPD takes advantage of aesthetic ablative fractional laser to generate skin microchannels to support high-efficient vaccine delivery and at the same time creates photothermal stress in microchannel-surrounding tissues to boost vaccination. LPD could significantly enhance pandemic influenza 2009 H1N1 vaccine immunogenicity and protective efficacy as compared with needle-based intradermal delivery in murine models. The ablative fractional laser was found to induce host DNA release, activate NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 inflammasome, and stimulate IL-1β release despite their dispensability for laser adjuvant effects. Instead, the ablative fractional laser activated MyD88 to mediate its adjuvant effects by potentiation of antigen uptake, maturation, and migration of dendritic cells. LPD also induced minimal local or systemic adverse reactions due to the microfractional and sustained vaccine delivery. Our data support the development of self-adjuvanted vaccine delivery technologies by intentional induction of well-controlled tissue stress to alert innate immune systems for more immunogenic vaccination.

Authors

Zhuofan Li, Yan Cao, Yibo Li, Yiwen Zhao, Xinyuan Chen

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Figure 3

LPD enhances local antigen uptake.

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LPD enhances local antigen uptake.
C57BL/6 mice were subjected to LPD or...
C57BL/6 mice were subjected to LPD or ID delivery of AF647-OVA or left NI. Skin was collected 18 or 36 hours later. Single-cell suspensions were prepared followed by immunostaining and flow cytometry analysis. (A) Representative dot plots showing gating strategies of different DC subsets in the skin. More gating strategies are shown in Supplemental Figure 2C. (B) Percentage of AF647+ cells and MFI of AF647 in different DC subsets in the skin at 18 hours. (C) Representative dot plots showing percentage of AF647+ cells in different DC subsets in the skin at 36 hours. (D) Percentage of AF647+ cells and MFI of AF647 in different DC subsets in the skin at 36 hours. (E) Changes of individual DC subset levels in the skin following LPD and ID delivery of AF647-OVA. n = 6–8. One-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple-comparison test was used to compare differences between groups (B and D). Two-way ANOVA with Bonferroni’s posttest was used to compare differences between groups at different time points (E). *, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001.

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