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Combined Intranasal Nanoemulsion and RIG-I Activating RNA Adjuvants Enhance Mucosal, Humoral, and Cellular Immunity to Influenza Virus.

Authors :
Wong PT
Goff PH
Sun RJ
Ruge MJ
Ermler ME
Sebring A
O'Konek JJ
Landers JJ
Janczak KW
Sun W
Baker JR Jr
Source :
Molecular pharmaceutics [Mol Pharm] 2021 Feb 01; Vol. 18 (2), pp. 679-698. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jun 15.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Current influenza virus vaccines are focused on humoral immunity and are limited by the short duration of protection, narrow cross-strain efficacy, and suboptimal immunogenicity. Here, we combined two chemically and biologically distinct adjuvants, an oil-in-water nanoemulsion (NE) and RNA-based agonists of RIG-I, to determine whether the diverse mechanisms of these adjuvants could lead to improved immunogenicity and breadth of protection against the influenza virus. NE activates TLRs, stimulates immunogenic apoptosis, and enhances cellular antigen uptake, leading to a balanced T <subscript>H</subscript> 1/T <subscript>H</subscript> 2/T <subscript>H</subscript> 17 response when administered intranasally. RIG-I agonists included RNAs derived from Sendai and influenza viral defective interfering RNAs (IVT DI, 3php, respectively) and RIG-I/TLR3 agonist, poly(I:C) (pIC), which induce IFN-Is and T <subscript>H</subscript> 1-polarized responses. NE/RNA combined adjuvants potentially allow for costimulation of multiple innate immune receptor pathways, more closely mimicking patterns of activation occurring during natural viral infection. Mice intranasally immunized with inactivated A/Puerto Rico/8/1934 (H1N1) (PR/8) adjuvanted with NE/IVT DI or NE/3php (but not NE/pIC) showed synergistic enhancement of systemic PR/8-specific IgG with significantly greater avidity and virus neutralization activity than the individual adjuvants. Notably, NE/IVT DI induced protective neutralizing titers after a single immunization. Hemagglutinin stem-specific antibodies were also improved, allowing recognition of heterologous and heterosubtypic hemagglutinins. All NE/RNAs elicited substantial PR/8-specific sIgA. Finally, a unique cellular response with enhanced T <subscript>H</subscript> 1/T <subscript>H</subscript> 17 immunity was induced with the NE/RNAs. These results demonstrate that the enhanced immunogenicity of the adjuvant combinations was synergistic and not simply additive, highlighting the potential value of a combined adjuvant approach for improving the efficacy of vaccination against the influenza virus.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1543-8392
Volume :
18
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular pharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32491861
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.0c00315