4.7 Article

Multifunctional Dendronized Polypeptides for Controlled Adjuvanticity

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 12, Pages 5074-5086

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.1c01052

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-2004555]
  2. Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) [HDTRA1-18-1-0035, HDTRA-18-1-0036]
  3. National Science Foundation through the UC Irvine Materials Research Science and Engineering Center [DMR-2011967]
  4. Cancer Center Support Grant [CA-62203]
  5. Center for Complex Biological Systems Support Grant at the University of California, Irvine [GM-076516]

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Vaccination is crucial for treating infectious and cancerous diseases, but the lack of proper vaccines for many diseases remains a challenge. This study presents a novel synthetic adjuvant with the potential to enhance immune responses and stimulate antibody and T cell reactions. The adjuvant is easy to produce, has adjustable structures, and could advance vaccine development.
Vaccination has been playing an important role in treating both infectious and cancerous diseases. Nevertheless, many diseases still lack proper vaccines due to the difficulty to generate sufficient amounts of antigen-specific antibodies or T cells. Adjuvants provide an important route to improve and direct immune responses. However, there are few adjuvants approved clinically and many of them lack the clear structure/adjuvanticity relationship. Here, we synthesized and evaluated a series of dendronized polypeptides (denpols) functionalized with varying tryptophan/histidine (W/H) molar ratios of 0/100, 25/75, 50/50, 75/25, and 100/0 as tunable synthetic adjuvants. The denpols showed structure-dependent inflammasome activation in THP1 monocytic cells and structure-related activation and antigen cross-presentation in vitro in bone marrow-derived dendritic cells. We used the denpols with bacterial pathogen Coxiella burnetii antigens in vivo, which showed both high and tunable adjuvating activities, as demonstrated by the antigen-specific antibody and T cell responses. The denpols are easy to make and scalable, biodegradable, and have highly adjustable chemical structures. Taken together, denpols show great potential as a new and versatile adjuvant platform that allows us to adjust adjuvanticity based on structure-activity correlation with the aim to fine-tune the immune response, thus advancing vaccine development.

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