4.8 Article

A novel built-in adjuvant metallothionein-3 aids protein antigens to induce rapid, robust, and durable immune responses

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.1024437

Keywords

metallothionein-3; adjuvants; vaccines; protein antigens; immune responses

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. [32170945]

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This study reported human metallothionein-3 (MT3) as a promising adjuvant candidate that can enhance rapid, effective, and durable antigen-specific immune responses. MT3 served as a built-in adjuvant and increased antibody responses by 100-1000 folds. Fusion of MT3 to antigens stimulated earlier and stronger antibody responses compared to other adjuvants. The study also found that other members of the mammalian MT family had potential adjuvant effects, but less potent than human MT3.
Adjuvants are crucial components of vaccines that can enhance and modulate antigen-specific immune responses. Herein, we reported for the first time that human metallothionein-3 (MT3), a low molecular weight cysteine-rich metal-binding protein, was a novel promising adjuvant candidate that could help protein antigens to induce rapid, effective, and durable antigen-specific immune responses. In the present study, MT3 was fused to outer membrane protein 19 (Omp19) of Brucella abortus (MT3-Omp19, MO) and C fragment heavy chain (Hc) of tetanus neurotoxin (MT3-Hc, MH), respectively. The results showed that MT3 as a built-in adjuvant increased the Omp19- or Hc-specific antibody responses by 100-1000 folds in seven days after primary immunization. Compared to other commercially available adjuvants, MT3 could stimulate earlier (4 days after primary injection) and stronger (10-100 folds) antibody response with lower antigen dose, and its adjuvanticity relied on fusion to antigen. Although the mechanism was not clear yet, the fusion protein MO was observed to directly activate DCs, promote germinal center formation and improve the speed of Ig class switching. Interestingly, our subsequent study found that other members of the mammalian MT family (human MT1 or murine MT3 for examples) also had potential adjuvant effects, but their effects were lower than human MT3. Overall, this study explored a new function of human MT3 as a novel built-in adjuvant, which may have important clinical application potential in vaccine development against global pandemics.

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