功能高分子材料教育部重点实验室

近期发表论文
当前位置: 首页 > 科技创新 > 近期发表论文 > 正文

赵汉英课题组 | MACROMOLECULAR RAPID COMMUNICATIONS

发布人:    发布时间:2023/10/23   浏览次数:

Polymer-Protein Nanovaccine Synthesized via Reactive Self-Assembly with Potential Application in Cancer Immunotherapy: Physicochemical and Biological Characterization In Vitro and In Vivo


作者

Zhang, MM (Zhang, Mingming) [1] , [2] ; Chen, WJ (Chen, Wenjuan) [1] , [2] ; Ju, YY (Ju, Yuanyuan) [3] ; Zhao, HY (Zhao, Hanying) [3] ; Wang, C (Wang, Chun) [4]
(由 Clarivate 提供)

Source

MACROMOLECULAR RAPID COMMUNICATIONS

DOI

10.1002/marc.202300438

在线发表

OCT 2023

已索引

2023-10-17

文献类型

Article; Early Access

跳转至

摘要

Nanovaccines composed of polymeric nanocarriers and protein-based antigens have attracted much attention in recent years because of their enormous potential in the prevention and treatment of diseases such as viral infections and cancer. While surface-conjugated protein antigens are known to be more immunoactive than encapsulated antigens, current surface conjugation methods often result in low and insufficient protein loading. Herein, reactive self-assembly is used to prepare nanovaccine from poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) and ovalbumin (OVA)-a model antigen. A rapid thiol-disulfide exchange reaction between PCL with pendant pyridyl disulfide groups and thiolated OVA results in the formation of nanoparticles with narrow size distribution. High OVA loading (approximate to 70-80 wt%) is achieved, and the native secondary structure of OVA is preserved. Compared to free OVA, the nanovaccine is much superior in enhancing antigen uptake by bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs), promoting BMDC maturation and antigen presentation via the MHC I pathway, persisting at the injection site and draining lymph nodes, activating both Th1 and Th2 T cell immunity, and ultimately, resisting tumor challenge in mice. This is the first demonstration of reactive self-assembly for the construction of a polymer-protein nanovaccine with clear potential in advancing cancer immunotherapy.

Reactive self-assembly is used to prepare covalently conjugated poly(epsilon-caprolactone)-ovalbumin (PCL-OVA) nanovaccines of high antigen loading. Compared to free OVA, the nanovaccines are superior in enhancing antigen uptake by bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs), promoting BMDC maturation and antigen presentation, persisting at the injection site and draining lymph nodes, activating Th1 and Th2 immunity, and ultimately, resisting tumor challenge in mice.