4.6 Article

Self-Assembly of Flagellin into Immunostimulatory Ring-like Nanostructures as an Antigen Delivery System

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 694-707

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.1c01332694

Keywords

nanovaccine; protein self-assembly; flagellin; immunomodulator; toll-like receptor 5; influenza A virus

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. International Development Research Centre (IDRC) [108517]
  3. NSERC [RGPIN-2018-06209, RGPN-2016-06532]

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Proteinaceous nanoparticles can be effective antigen carriers for vaccination, especially when modified to form ring-like nanostructures with specific antigens attached, which can stimulate immune responses, enhance antibody production, and protect against lethal infections like the influenza A virus.
Proteinaceous nanoparticles represent attractive antigen carriers for vaccination as their size and repetitive antigen displays that mimic most viral particles enable efficient immune processing. However, these nanocarriers are often unable to stimulate efficiently the innate immune system, requiring coadministration with adjuvants to promote long-lasting protective immunity. The protein flagellin, which constitutes the primary constituent of the bacterial flagellum, has been widely evaluated as an antigen carrier due to its intrinsic adjuvant properties involving activation of the innate immune receptor Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5). Although flagellin is known for its ability to self-assemble into micron-scale length nanotubes, few studies have evaluated the potential usage of flagellin-based nanostructures as immunostimulatory antigen carriers. In this study, we reported for the first time a strategy to guide the self-assembly of a flagellin protein from Bacillus subtilis, Hag, into lower aspect ratio nanoparticles by hindering non-covalent interactions responsible for its elongation into nanotubes. We observed that addition of an antigenic sequence derived from the influenza A virus (3M2e) at the C-terminus of this flagellin, as opposed to positioning the epitope into mid-sequence, precluded filament elongation and resulted in low aspect ratio ring-like nanostructures upon salting-out-induced selfassembly. These nanostructures displayed the antigen at their surface and shared morphological and structural characteristics with flagellin nanotubes, with a diameter of approximately 12 nm, and an alpha-helix-rich secondary structure. Flagellin ring-like nanostructures were efficiently internalized by antigen-presenting cells, and avidly activated the TLR5 in vitro as well as the innate and adaptive immune responses. Intranasal immunization of mice with these nanostructures resulted in the potentiation of the antigen-specific antibody response and protection against a lethal infection with the influenza A virus, illustrating the potential of these intrinsically immunostimulatory nanostructures as antigen carriers. KEYWORDS: nanovaccine, protein self-assembly, flagellin, immunomodulator, toll-like receptor 5, influenza A virus

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