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Innate immune protection against infectious diseases by pulmonary administration of a phospholipid conjugated TLR7 ligand

Authors :
Donald G. Guiney
Maripat Corr
Dennis A. Carson
Rommel I. Tawatao
Howard B. Cottam
Brian Crain
Mojgan Sabet
Christina C.N. Wu
Shiyin Yao
Michael Chan
Justin G. Julander
Donald F. Smee
Fitzgerald S Lao
Tomoko Hayashi
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Pulmonary administration of Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligands protects hosts from inhaled pathogens. However, systemic side effects induced by TLR stimulation limit clinical development. Here, a small-molecule TLR7 ligand conjugated with phospholipid, 1V270 (also designated TMX201), was tested for innate immune activation and its ability to prevent pulmonary infection in mice. We hypothesized that phospholipid conjugation would increase internalization by immune cells and localize the compound in the lungs, thus avoiding side effects due to systemic cytokine release. Pulmonary 1V270 administration increased innate cytokines and chemokines in bronchial alveolar lavage fluids, but neither caused systemic induction of cytokines nor B cell proliferation in distant lymphoid organs. 1V270 activated pulmonary CD11c+ dendritic cells, which migrated to local lymph nodes. However, there was minimal cell infiltration into the pulmonary parenchyma. Prophylactic administration of 1V270 significantly protected mice from lethal infection with Bacillus anthracis, Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus and H1N1 influenza virus. The maximum tolerated dose of 1V270 by pulmonary administration was 75 times the effective therapeutic dose. Therefore, pulmonary 1V270 treatment can protect the host from different infectious agents by stimulating local innate immune responses while exhibiting an excellent safety profile.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b073e36237a28a905d07621dbe3503e