Immunomodulatory Nanoparticles
from Elastin-Like Recombinamers: Single-Molecules for Tuberculosis
Vaccine Development
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Abstract
This study investigates both the physicochemical properties
and immunogenicity of a genetically engineered elastin-like block
corecombinamer (ELbcR) containing a major membrane protein sequence
from <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>. The recombinant
production of this ELbcR allows the production of large quantities
of safe, antigenic particle-based constructs that directly and reversibly
self-assemble into highly biocompatible, multivalent, monodisperse,
and stable nanovesicles with a diameter of 55 nm from the same gene
product using a highly efficient and cost-effective inverse transition
cycling (ITC) procedure. The compositional complexity of these vesicles
is retained after secondary processes such as endotoxin removal, sterilization,
and lyophilization. An initial pro-chemotactic cytokine response (IL-1β)
followed by a pro-Th2/IL-5 response was observed in mice plasma following
subcutaneous administration of the antigen-loaded nanovesicles in
mice. This biphasic model of cytokine production was coupled with
humoral isotype switching from IgM- to IgG-specific antibodies against
the antigen, which was only observed in the presence of both the antigen
and the polymer in the same construct and in the absence of additional
adjuvants