Version 2 2025-03-14, 17:08Version 2 2025-03-14, 17:08
Version 1 2025-03-14, 02:04Version 1 2025-03-14, 02:04
Posted on 2025-03-14 - 17:08
Mucosal
immunity plays a pivotal role in safeguarding against significant
global infectious diseases caused by mucosal pathogens. The development
of mucosal vaccines has been limited by the poor efficiency of antigen
display and the risk of adjuvants. Here, we report an engineered yeast
vaccine integrating a well-displayed antigen with an intrinsic adjuvant
for the development of innate and adaptive immunity to the intestinal
mucosa. Compared with antigen-secretory yeast, antigen-anchored yeast
significantly activated gut dendritic cells (DCs) and promoted follicular
helper T (Tfh) cell differentiation, thereby amplifying the immune
response by the interaction with Tfh-B cells. Consequently, oral vaccination
of SARS-CoV-2 receptor-binding domain (RBD)-anchored yeast triggered
stronger RBD-specific IgA-neutralizing effects, providing potential
adaptive protections. Given its corresponding impact on the functionality
of both innate and adaptive mucosal responses, the proposed RBD-anchored
yeast outperformed RBD-anchored bacteria and biomimetic nanovaccine
in the production of RBD-specific IgA and IgG. Together, these results
revealed how antigen-displaying patterns could be modulated to elicit
intestinal mucosal immunity and demonstrated the translational potential
of antigen-displayed yeast for effective mucosal protection.