4.7 Article

Plant-based, adjuvant-free, potent multivalent vaccines for avian influenza virus via Lactococcus surface display

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 8, Pages 1505-1520

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jipb.13141

Keywords

bacteria-like particle (BLP); Lactococcus lactis; multi-valent vaccine; plant-based vaccine; trimeric HA

Funding

  1. Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy [10063301]
  2. National Research Foundation - Ministry of Science and Information Technology, Korea [2019R1A2B5B03099982, 2019R1A2C1087207]
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea [2019R1A2B5B03099982, 2019R1A2C1087207] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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The study developed a new subunit vaccine platform by expressing HA ectodomains of influenza viruses in plants, achieving potent, adjuvant-free, and multivalent vaccination. The platform successfully demonstrated strong immune responses in mice and chickens and proposed combining plant-based antigen production with BLP-based delivery as a cost-effective approach for multivalent subunit vaccines.
Influenza epidemics frequently and unpredictably break out all over the world, and seriously affect the breeding industry and human activity. Inactivated and live attenuated viruses have been used as protective vaccines but exhibit high risks for biosafety. Subunit vaccines enjoy high biosafety and specificity but have a few weak points compared to inactivated virus or live attenuated virus vaccines, especially in low immunogenicity. In this study, we developed a new subunit vaccine platform for a potent, adjuvant-free, and multivalent vaccination. The ectodomains of hemagglutinins (HAs) of influenza viruses were expressed in plants as trimers (tHAs) to mimic their native forms. tHAs in plant extracts were directly used without purification for binding to inactivated Lactococcus (iLact) to produce iLact-tHAs, an antigen-carrying bacteria-like particle (BLP). tHAs BLP showed strong immune responses in mice and chickens without adjuvants. Moreover, simultaneous injection of two different antigens by two different formulas, tHA(H5N6 + H9N2) BLP or a combination of tHA(H5N6) BLP and tHA(H9N2) BLP, led to strong immune responses to both antigens. Based on these results, we propose combinations of plant-based antigen production and BLP-based delivery as a highly potent and cost-effective platform for multivalent vaccination for subunit vaccines.

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