posted on 2024-05-30, 07:03authored byVictor
H. Leyva-Grado, Alexander Marin, Raman Hlushko, Abdul S. Yunus, Dominique Promeneur, Amara Luckay, Glorie G. Lazaro, Stefan Hamm, Antony S. Dimitrov, Christopher C. Broder, Alexander K. Andrianov
The ultimate vaccine against infections caused by Nipah
virus should
be capable of providing protection at the respiratory tractthe
most probable port of entry for this pathogen. Intranasally delivered
vaccines, which target nasal-associated lymphoid tissue and induce
both systemic and mucosal immunity, are attractive candidates for
enabling effective vaccination against this lethal disease. Herein,
the water-soluble polyphosphazene delivery vehicle assembles into
nanoscale supramolecular constructs with the soluble extracellular
portion of the Hendra virus attachment glycoproteina promising
subunit vaccine antigen against both Nipah and Hendra viruses. These
supramolecular constructs signal through Toll-like receptor 7/8 and
promote binding interactions with mucinan important feature
of effective mucosal adjuvants. High mass contrast of phosphorus–nitrogen
backbone of the polymer enables a successful visualization of nanoconstructs
in their vitrified state by cryogenic electron microscopy. Here, we
characterize the self-assembly of polyphosphazene macromolecule with
biologically relevant ligands by asymmetric flow field flow fractionation,
dynamic light scattering, fluorescence spectrophotometry, and turbidimetric
titration methods. Furthermore, a polyphosphazene-enabled intranasal
Nipah vaccine candidate demonstrates the ability to induce immune
responses in hamsters and shows superiority in inducing total IgG
and neutralizing antibodies when benchmarked against the respective
clinical stage alum adjuvanted vaccine. The results highlight the
potential of polyphosphazene-enabled nanoassemblies in the development
of intranasal vaccines.