International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2024)

Solid Lipid Nanoparticles Delivering a DNA Vaccine Encoding <i>Helicobacter pylori</i> Urease A Subunit: Immune Analyses before and after a Mouse Model of Infection

  • Jasmine E. Francis,
  • Ivana Skakic,
  • Debolina Majumdar,
  • Aya C. Taki,
  • Ravi Shukla,
  • Anna Walduck,
  • Peter M. Smooker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25021076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
p. 1076

Abstract

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In this study, novel solid lipid particles containing the adjuvant lipid monophosphoryl lipid A (termed ‘SLN-A’) were synthesised. The SLN-A particles were able to efficiently bind and form complexes with a DNA vaccine encoding the urease alpha subunit of Helicobacter pylori. The resultant nanoparticles were termed lipoplex-A. In a mouse model of H. pylori infection, the lipoplex-A nanoparticles were used to immunise mice, and the resultant immune responses were analysed. It was found that the lipoplex-A vaccine was able to induce high levels of antigen-specific antibodies and an influx of gastric CD4+ T cells in vaccinated mice. In particular, a prime with lipoplex-A and a boost with soluble UreA protein induced significantly high levels of the IgG1 antibody, whereas two doses of lipoplex-A induced high levels of the IgG2c antibody. In this study, lipoplex-A vaccination did not lead to a significant reduction in H. pylori colonisation in a challenge model; however, these results point to the utility of the system for delivering DNA vaccine-encoded antigens to induce immune responses and suggest the ability to tailor those responses.

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