Self-assembled peptide nanofibers raising durable antibody responses against a malaria epitope

JS Rudra, S Mishra, AS Chong, RA Mitchell, EH Nardin… - Biomaterials, 2012 - Elsevier
JS Rudra, S Mishra, AS Chong, RA Mitchell, EH Nardin, V Nussenzweig, JH Collier
Biomaterials, 2012Elsevier
Biomaterials that modulate innate and adaptive immune responses are receiving increasing
interest as adjuvants for eliciting protective immunity against a variety of diseases. Previous
results have indicated that self-assembling β-sheet peptides, when fused with short peptide
epitopes, can act as effective adjuvants and elicit robust and long-lived antibody responses.
Here we investigated the mechanism of immunogenicity and the quality of antibody
responses raised by a peptide epitope from Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite (CS) …
Biomaterials that modulate innate and adaptive immune responses are receiving increasing interest as adjuvants for eliciting protective immunity against a variety of diseases. Previous results have indicated that self-assembling β-sheet peptides, when fused with short peptide epitopes, can act as effective adjuvants and elicit robust and long-lived antibody responses. Here we investigated the mechanism of immunogenicity and the quality of antibody responses raised by a peptide epitope from Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite (CS) protein, (NANP)3,conjugated to the self-assembling peptide domain Q11. The mechanism of adjuvant action was investigated in knockout mice with impaired MyD88, NALP3, TLR-2, or TLR-5 function, and the quality of antibodies raised against (NANP)3-Q11 was assessed using a transgenic sporozoite neutralizing (TSN) assay for malaria infection. (NANP)3-Q11 self-assembled into nanofibers, and antibody responses lasted up to 40 weeks in C57BL/6 mice. The antibody responses were T cell- and MyD88-dependent. Sera from mice primed with either irradiated sporozoites or a synthetic peptide, (T1BT*)4-P3C, and boosted with (NANP)3-Q11 showed significant increases in antibody titers and significant inhibition of sporozoite infection in TSN assays. In addition, two different epitopes could be self-assembled together without compromising the strength or duration of the antibody responses raised against either of them, making these materials promising platforms for self-adjuvanting multi-antigenic immunotherapies.
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