Back to Search
Start Over
Particulate Mycobacterial Vaccines Induce Protective Immunity against Tuberculosis in Mice
- Source :
- Nanomaterials, Volume 11, Issue 8, Nanomaterials, Vol 11, Iss 2060, p 2060 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Currently available vaccines fail to provide consistent protection against tuberculosis (TB). New, improved vaccines are urgently needed for controlling the disease. The mycobacterial antigen fusions H4 (Ag85B-TB10.4) and H28 (Ag85B-TB10.4-Rv2660c) have been shown to be very immunogenic and have been considered as potential candidates for TB vaccine development. However, soluble protein vaccines are often poorly immunogenic, but augmented immune responses can be induced when selected antigens are delivered in particulate form. This study investigated whether the mycobacterial antigen fusions H4 and H28 can induce protective immunity when assembled into particulate vaccines (polyester nanoparticle-H4, polyester nanoparticle-H28, H4 nanoparticles and H28 nanoparticles). The particulate mycobacterial vaccines were assembled inside an engineered endotoxin-free production strain of Escherichia coli at high yield. Vaccine nanoparticles were purified and induced long-lasting antigen-specific T cell responses and protective immunity in mice challenged by aerosol with virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A significant reduction of M. tuberculosis CFU, up to 0.7-log10 protection, occurred in the lungs of mice immunized with particulate vaccines in comparison to placebo-vaccinated mice (p &lt<br />0.0001). Polyester nanoparticles displaying the mycobacterial antigen fusion H4 induced a similar level of protective immunity in the lung when compared to M. bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), the currently approved TB vaccine. The safe and immunogenic polyester nanoparticle-H4 vaccine is a promising subunit vaccine candidate, as it can be cost-effectively manufactured and efficiently induces protection against TB.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Tuberculosis
General Chemical Engineering
T cell
Virulence
medicine.disease_cause
Article
Microbiology
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
protective immunity
Immune system
Medical microbiology
Antigen
particulate vaccines
medicine
General Materials Science
QD1-999
Escherichia coli
antigen nanoparticles
bioengineering
biology
self-assembly
polyester nanoparticle
biology.organism_classification
medicine.disease
Chemistry
medicine.anatomical_structure
tuberculosis
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20794991
- Volume :
- 11
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nanomaterials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....48d298cfbae79150d87070f22155a24e