Evaluation of a Self-Adjuvanted Self-Assembling Protein Nanoparticle as a Platform for Vaccine Development

Vaccines are one of the most impactful inventions in modern medicine and are responsible for significant improvements in public health. While various vaccine types are available, subunit vaccines have substantial interest in the field. Typical subunit vaccines are advantageous because they are consi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Low, Sarah
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: OpenCommons@UConn 2019
Subjects:
GIP
Online Access:https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/2069
https://opencommons.uconn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8348&context=dissertations
Description
Summary:Vaccines are one of the most impactful inventions in modern medicine and are responsible for significant improvements in public health. While various vaccine types are available, subunit vaccines have substantial interest in the field. Typical subunit vaccines are advantageous because they are considered safe; however, they often do not elicit strong immune responses because they cannot crosslink B cell receptors. To overcome this, repetitive display systems are used. Here we study an exciting platform called Self-Assembling Protein Nanoparticles (SAPNs), which contain coiled-coil oligomerization domains that self-assemble into nanoparticles similar in size and shape to icosahedral viruses. Previous work has demonstrated that SAPNs can successfully induce immune response and protection against diseases including SARS, malaria, HIV, and avian flu. Here we sought to optimize the SAPNs with the addition of an immunopotentiator creating self-adjuvanted SAPNs. We explored two different adjuvants, flagellin, and CpG. Both have previously demonstrated their effects to enhance immune response. In this work, we first explore the biophysical properties of the self-adjuvanted SAPNs with flagellin. Various techniques including dynamic light scattering (DLS) and analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC) demonstrated the stability of self-adjuvanted SAPNs. Next, this SAPN was used to study obesity using glucose-dependent insulinoptropic polypeptide (GIP). The primary role of GIP is stimulation of glucose dependent insulin secretion, which has been linked to obesity. Unfortunately, our initial study yielded limited immune responses against GIP. Therefore, additional optimization of the SAPN was completed to encapsulate CpG. Here, the immune response against the SAPN was higher than that against GIP. Further studies led to the understanding that there is a diversion of the immune response from GIP to flagellin. This is largely driven by the inherent immunodominance of flagellin; however, the fact that GIP is a self-peptide ...