Subunit vaccines combine immunodominant protein or peptide antigens from pathogens with select adjuvants, aiming to provide a more scalable, reproducible, low cost and rapid alternative to attenuated vaccines that contain live pathogens. Unfortunately, current subunit vaccines lack lipid antigens and rarely achieve the broad T cell responses required for lasting immunological memory and protection. In contrast, attenuated vaccines lack customization and scalability, but incorporate the entire pathogen to provide both protein and lipid antigens during immunization. This combination of lipid and protein antigens activates a broad spectrum of effector T cells, including conventional MHC-restricted T cells that respond to peptides and display considerable polymorphism, as well as nonpolymorphic CD1-restricted T cells that are directed against specific lipids. A more biomimetic strategy that simultaneously activates both lipid- and peptide-specific T cells may therefore show enhanced efficacy and control compared to subunit vaccines limited to protein antigens. The neglect of lipid antigens from current subunit vaccines and immunotherapies is primarily due to 1) difficulties in targeted delivery of lipids, and 2) a lack of suitable mouse models. In humans, the CD1 family consists of group 1 CD1 molecules (CD1a, CD1b, and CD1c) and the group 2 CD1 molecule CD1d. Mice, however, only express CD1d. This project, which involves a close collaboration between research groups led by a bioengineer and a basic immunologist, aims to overcome these obstacles by designing nanobiomaterials for enhanced dual delivery of both lipid and protein antigens in combination with adjuvants to induce CD1- and MHC- restricted T cell response in humanized CD1 transgenic (hCD1Tg) mice. To characterize, optimize and benchmark these novel nanobiomaterials against the most frequently used attenuated vaccine in the world, the bacillus Calmette-Gurin (BCG) tuberculosis (TB) vaccine, the following aims are proposed:
In Aim 1, in vitro and in vivo approaches will identify the optimal nanobiomaterials and adjuvant combination for eliciting a combined CD1- and MHC-restricted T cell response.
In Aim 2, a lipid/protein multi-antigen approach will be validated in hCD1Tg mice challenged with virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb).
In Aim 3, a novel hydrogel delivery system will be employed for controlled and sustained release of lipid-antigen-loaded nanobiomaterials to assess efficacy and safety of chronic CD1-restricted T cell activation. The proposed study will provide a ?proof of concept? that combining Mtb lipids and proteins into a single subunit vaccine formulation that targets both conventional and unconventional T cell subsets can enhance overall immunity to Mtb infection. The methodology and antigen/adjuvant delivery systems developed in this study will guide the next generation of multi-subunit vaccines for TB and other bacterial pathogens to provide scalable routes of rapid vaccine fabrication.
Live attenuated bacterial vaccines elicit broad immune responses against both lipid and protein components, yet current subunit vaccine strategies do not sufficiently incorporate the lipid-specific mechanisms of immunity. We propose the in vitro and in vivo optimization and characterization of a versatile nanobiomaterial-based vaccine delivery system designed for simultaneous elicitation of both lipid- and peptide-specific immune responses. Engineered nanobiomaterials, novel sustained release hydrogels, and rationally selected antigen and adjuvant combinations will be evaluated for toxicity and efficacy in unique humanized mouse models challenged with virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis.