4.8 Article

Interrogation of Antigen Display on Individual Vaccine Nanoparticles for Achieving Neutralizing Antibody Responses against Hepatitis C Virus

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 12, Pages 7832-7838

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b03601

Keywords

Nanoparticle; vaccine; flow cytometry; antigen; hepatitis C virus

Funding

  1. NIH [R01AI079031, R01AI106005, U19AI123861, R01AI127070, R01EB022563, R01HL125555]
  2. Melanoma Research Alliance [348774]
  3. DoD/CDMRP Peer Reviewed Cancer Research Program [W81XWH-16-1-0369]
  4. Emerald Foundation
  5. NSF CAREER Award [1553831]

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Elicitation of neutralizing antibody responses against hepatitis C virus (HCV) has been a challenging goal. While the E2 subunit of the HCV envelope glycoprotein complex is a promising target for generating cross-genotype neutralizing antibodies, vaccinations with soluble E2 immunogens generally induce weak neutralizing antibody responses. Here, E2 immunogens (i.e., E2.661 and E2c.661) were loaded into lipid-based nanovaccines and examined for induction of neutralizing antibody responses. Compared with soluble E2 immunogens, E2 nanoparticles elicited 6- to 20-fold higher E2-specific serum IgG titers in mice. Importantly, E2 vaccine nanoparticles analyzed at a single particle level with a flow cytometry-based method revealed interesting dynamics between epitope display on the surfaces of nanoparticles in vitro and induction of neutralizing antibody responses in vivo. E2c.661 nanoparticles that are preferentially bound by a broadly neutralizing antibody, HCV1, in vitro elicit neutralizing antibody responses against both autologous and heterologous HCV virions in vivo. In stark contrast, E2.661 nanoparticles with reduced HCV1-antibody binding in vitro mainly induce autologous neutralizing antibody responses in vivo. These results show that rationale antigen design coupled with interrogation of epitope display on vaccine nanoparticles at a single particle level may aid in vaccine development toward achieving neutralizing antibody responses in vivo.

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