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Inflammasome-Dependent and -Independent IL-18 Production Mediates Immunity to the ISCOMATRIX Adjuvant
Author(s) -
Nicholas S. Wilson,
Peter Duewell,
Becky Yang,
Yun Li,
Scot A. Marsters,
Sandra Koernig,
Eicke Latz,
Eugene Maraskovsky,
Adriana Baz Morelli,
Max Schnurr,
Avi Ashkenazi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1302011
Subject(s) - inflammasome , adjuvant , innate immune system , immune system , acquired immune system , immunology , immunity , pyroptosis , in vivo , biology , priming (agriculture) , interleukin 10 , inflammation , microbiology and biotechnology , botany , germination
Adjuvants are an essential component of modern vaccines and used for their ability to elicit immunity to coadministered Ags. Many adjuvants in clinical development are particulates, but how they drive innate and adaptive immune responses remains poorly understood. Studies have shown that a number of vaccine adjuvants activate inflammasome pathways in isolated APCs. However, the contribution of inflammasome activation to vaccine-mediated immunity in vivo remains controversial. In this study, we evaluated immune cell responses to the ISCOMATRIX adjuvant (IMX) in mice. Like other particulate vaccine adjuvants, IMX potently activated the NALP-3-ASC-Caspase-1 inflammasome in APCs, leading to IL-1β and IL-18 production. The IL-18R pathway, but not IL-1R, was required for early innate and subsequent cellular immune responses to a model IMX vaccine. APCs directly exposed to IMX underwent an endosome-mediated cell-death response, which we propose initiates inflammatory events locally at the injection site. Importantly, both inflammasome-related and -unrelated pathways contributed to IL-18 dependence in vivo following IMX administration. TNF-α provided a physiological priming signal for inflammasome-dependent IL-18 production by APCs, which correlated with reduced vaccine-mediated immune cell responses in TNF-α- or TNFR-deficient mice. Taken together, our findings highlight an important disconnect between the mechanisms of vaccine adjuvant action in vitro versus in vivo.

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