A New RNA-Based Adjuvant Enhances Virus-Specific Vaccine Responses by Locally Triggering TLR- and RLH-Dependent Effects
Author(s) -
Annett Ziegler,
Claudia Soldner,
Stefan Lienenklaus,
Julia Spanier,
Stephanie Trittel,
Peggy Riese,
Thomas Kramps,
Siegfried Weiß,
Regina Heidenreich,
Edith Jasny,
Carlos A. Guzmán,
KarlJosef Kallen,
Mariola FotinMleczek,
Ulrich Kalinke
Publication year - 2017
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.1601129
Subject(s) - adjuvant , virology , virus , biology , immunology
Among innovative adjuvants conferring a Th1-shift, RNAdjuvant is a promising candidate. This adjuvant consists of a 547-nt uncapped noncoding ssRNA containing polyU repeats that is stabilized by a cationic carrier peptide. Whereas vaccination of mice with an influenza subunit vaccine induced moderate virus-specific IgG1, vaccination together with RNAdjuvant significantly enhanced this IgG1 and additionally promoted the formation of IgG2b/c, which is indicative of Th1 responses. Furthermore, such sera neutralized influenza virus, whereas this effect was not detected upon vaccination with the subunit vaccine alone. Similarly, upon vaccination with virus-like particles displaying vesicular stomatitis virus G protein, RNAdjuvant promoted the formation of virus-specific IgG2b/c and enhanced neutralizing IgG responses to an extent that mice were protected against lethal virus infection. RNAdjuvant induced dendritic cells to upregulate activation markers and produce IFN-I. Although these effects were strictly TLR7 dependent, RNAdjuvant-mediated augmentation of vaccine responses needed concurrent TLR and RIG-I-like helicase signaling. This was indicated by the absence of the adjuvant effect in vaccinated MyD88 -/- Cardif -/- mice, which are devoid of TLR (with the exception of TLR3) and RIG-I-like helicase signaling, whereas in vaccinated MyD88 -/- mice the adjuvant effect was reduced. Notably, i.m. RNAdjuvant injection induced local IFN-I responses and did not induce systemic effects, implying good tolerability and a favorable safety profile for RNAdjuvant.
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