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result(s) for
"Taccone, Marianna"
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The adjuvant effect of MF59 is due to the oil-in-water emulsion formulation, none of the individual components induce a comparable adjuvant effect
by
Pezzotti, Annamaria
,
Bertholet, Sylvie
,
O’Hagan, Derek T.
in
Adaptive Immunity
,
Adjuvanticity
,
Adjuvants, Immunologic - chemistry
2013
•We dissect the mechanism of MF59, an adjuvant used in human vaccines.•We set to identify its putative adjuvant-active ingredient(s).•Span85 has immunostimulatory activity, but is not sufficient for adjuvanticity.•Only the formulated emulsion induces all hallmarks of innate and adaptive immunity.•MF59 is probably sensed due to its particulate nature.
MF59 is a safe and effective vaccine adjuvant that has been used in a licensed seasonal influenza vaccine for 15 years. The purpose of the present studies was to directly address a question that has been asked of us on many occasions: “which is the adjuvant active component of MF59?”. Since we have recently gained a number of insights on how MF59 works as an adjuvant, we were able to use these approaches to evaluate if the individual components of MF59 (squalene oil, the surfactants Span 85 and Tween 80 or the citrate buffer) showed any direct immunostimulatory activity. We assessed the ability of the individual components to stimulate the innate and adaptive immune responses that we have shown to be indicative of MF59-mediated adjuvanticity. No immune stimulatory capacities could be attributed to squalene, Tween 80 or the citrate buffer alone. Instead, we found that the lipophilic surfactant Span 85 contributes to activation of the muscle transcriptome. However, despite this local activation, Span 85 alone – like the other single components of MF59 – is not sufficient to induce an adjuvant effect. Only the fully formulated MF59 emulsion induces all the established hallmarks of innate and adaptive immune activation, which includes activation of genes indicative of transendothelial cell migration, strong influx of immune cells into the injection site and their enhanced antigen uptake and transport to the lymph nodes. These observations may have important implications in the design of optimal emulsion-based vaccine adjuvants.
Journal Article
adjuvant MF59 induces ATP release from muscle that potentiates response to vaccination
by
Montecucco, Cesare
,
Donvito, Giovanna
,
Di Virgilio, Francesco
in
adaptive immunity
,
Adenosine triphosphatase
,
adenosine triphosphate
2013
Vaccines are the most effective agents to control infections. In addition to the pathogen antigens, vaccines contain adjuvants that are used to enhance protective immune responses. However, the molecular mechanism of action of most adjuvants is ill-known, and a better understanding of adjuvanticity is needed to develop improved adjuvants based on molecular targets that further enhance vaccine efficacy. This is particularly important for tuberculosis, malaria, AIDS, and other diseases for which protective vaccines do not exist. Release of endogenous danger signals has been linked to adjuvanticity; however, the role of extracellular ATP during vaccination has never been explored. Here, we tested whether ATP release is involved in the immune boosting effect of four common adjuvants: aluminum hydroxide, calcium phosphate, incomplete Freund’s adjuvant, and the oil-in-water emulsion MF59. We found that intramuscular injection is always associated with a weak transient release of ATP, which was greatly enhanced by the presence of MF59 but not by all other adjuvants tested. Local injection of apyrase, an ATP-hydrolyzing enzyme, inhibited cell recruitment in the muscle induced by MF59 but not by alum or incomplete Freund’s adjuvant. In addition, apyrase strongly inhibited influenza-specific T-cell responses and hemagglutination inhibition titers in response to an MF59-adjuvanted trivalent influenza vaccine. These data demonstrate that a transient ATP release is required for innate and adaptive immune responses induced by MF59 and link extracellular ATP with an enhanced response to vaccination.
Journal Article
Co-administration of GM-CSF expressing RNA is a powerful tool to enhance potency of SAM-based vaccines
by
Maione, Domenico
,
D'Oro, Ugo
,
Manara, Cristina
in
Allergy and Immunology
,
Animal species
,
Antigen presentation
2019
•SAM vaccines were engineered to express cytokine GM-CSF and influenza antigen NP.•Administration of GM-CSF increases recruitment of antigen presenting cells at site of injection.•Co-administration of SAM expressing cytokine increases antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell response.•Enhanced response translates in an increased protection in a mouse model of influenza infection.•Cytokines in SAM vaccine design may potentiate the effectiveness of RNA vaccination.
Self-amplifying mRNAs (SAM)-based vaccines have been shown to induce a robust immune response in various animal species against both viral and bacterial pathogens. Due to their synthetic nature and to the versatility of the manufacturing process, SAM technology may represent an attractive solution for rapidly producing novel vaccines, which is particularly critical in case of pandemic infections or diseases mediated by newly emerging pathogens. Recent published data support the hypothesis that Antigen Presenting Cells (APCs) are responsible for CD8+ T-cell priming after SAM vaccination, suggesting cross-priming as the key mechanism for antigen presentation by SAM vaccines. In our study we investigated the possibility to enhance the immune response induced in mice by a single immunization with SAM by increasing the recruitment of APCs at the site of injection. To enhance SAM immunogenicity, we selected murine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) as a model chemoattractant for APCs, and developed a SAM-GM-CSF vector. We evaluated whether the use of SAM-GM-CSF in combination with a SAM construct encoding the Influenza A virus nucleoprotein (NP) would lead to an increase of APC recruitment and NP-specific immune response. We indeed observed that the administration of SAM-GM-CSF enhances the recruitment of APCs at the injection site. Consistently with our hypothesis, co-administration of SAM-GM-CSF with SAM-NP significantly improved the magnitude of NP-specific CD8+ T-cell response both in terms of frequency of cytotoxic antigen-specific CD8+ T-cells and their functional activity in vivo. Furthermore, co-immunization with SAM-GM-CSF and SAM-NP provided an increase in protection against a lethal challenge with influenza virus. In conclusion, we demonstrated that increased recruitment of APCs at the site of injection is associated with an enhanced effectiveness of SAM vaccination and might be a powerful tool to potentiate the efficacy of RNA vaccination.
Journal Article
Systems analysis of human responses to an aluminium hydroxide-adsorbed TLR7 agonist (AS37) adjuvanted vaccine reveals a dose-dependent and specific activation of the interferon-mediated antiviral response
by
Buricchi, Francesca
,
Nuti, Sandra
,
De Intinis, Carlo
in
Adjuvant System
,
Adjuvants
,
Adjuvants, Immunologic
2023
•An AS37-adjuvanted vaccine induced immune responses which maintained for 6 months.•Extensive immune profiling was conducted on a subset of participants.•AS37 increased expression of interferon-inducible genes and serum CXCL10 (IP-10).•AS37 upregulated specific innate immune cells and Ag-specific B and T lymphocytes.•The immune signature is consistent with toll-like receptor 7 engagement.
The candidate Adjuvant System AS37 contains a synthetic toll-like receptor agonist (TLR7a) adsorbed to alum. In a phase I study (NCT02639351), healthy adults were randomised to receive one dose of licensed alum-adjuvanted meningococcal serogroup C (MenC-CRM197) conjugate vaccine (control) or MenC-CRM197 conjugate vaccine adjuvanted with AS37 (TLR7a dose 12.5, 25, 50 or 100 µg). A subset of 66 participants consented to characterisation of peripheral whole blood transcriptomic responses, systemic cytokine/chemokine responses and multiple myeloid and lymphoid cell responses as exploratory study endpoints. Blood samples were collected pre-vaccination, 6 and 24 h post-vaccination, and 3, 7, 28 and 180 days post-vaccination. The gene expression profile in whole blood showed an early, AS37-specific transcriptome response that peaked at 24 h, increased with TLR7a dose up to 50 µg and generally resolved within one week. Five clusters of differentially expressed genes were identified, including those involved in the interferon-mediated antiviral response. Evaluation of 30 cytokines/chemokines by multiplex assay showed an increased level of interferon-induced chemokine CXCL10 (IP-10) at 24 h and 3 days post-vaccination in the AS37-adjuvanted vaccine groups. Increases in activated plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) and intermediate monocytes were detected 3 days post-vaccination in the AS37-adjuvanted vaccine groups. T follicular helper (Tfh) cells increased 7 days post-vaccination and were maintained at 28 days post-vaccination, particularly in the AS37-adjuvanted vaccine groups. Moreover, most of the subjects that received vaccine containing 25, 50 and 100 µg TLR7a showed an increased MenC-specific memory B cell responses versus baseline. These data show that the adsorption of TLR7a to alum promotes an immune signature consistent with TLR7 engagement, with up-regulation of interferon-inducible genes, cytokines and frequency of activated pDC, intermediate monocytes, MenC-specific memory B cells and Tfh cells. TLR7a 25–50 µg can be considered the optimal dose for AS37, particularly for the adjuvanted MenC-CRM197 conjugate vaccine.
Journal Article
The droplet size of emulsion adjuvants has significant impact on their potency, due to differences in immune cell-recruitment and -activation
2019
Self-emulsification is routinely used for oral delivery of lipophilic drugs
in vivo
, with the emulsion forming
in vivo
. We modified this technique to prepare novel oil-in-water emulsions of varying droplet size and composition on bench to enable adjuvanted vaccine delivery. We used these formulations to show that smaller droplets (20 nm) were much less effective as adjuvants for an influenza vaccine in mice than the emulsion droplet size of commercial influenza vaccine adjuvants (~160 nm). This was unexpected, given the many claims in the literature of the advantages of smaller particulates. We also undertook cell-recruitment mechanistic studies at site of injection and draining lymph nodes to directly address the question of why the smaller droplets were less effective. We discovered that emulsion droplet size and composition have a considerable impact on the ability to recruit immune cells to the injection site. We believe that further work is warranted to more extensively explore the question of whether, the smaller is not ‘better’, is a more common observation for particulate adjuvants.
Journal Article
Sublingual immunization with a subunit influenza vaccine elicits comparable systemic immune response as intramuscular immunization, but also induces local IgA and TH17 responses
by
Bertholet, Sylvie
,
Gallorini, Simona
,
Bonificio, Amanda
in
adaptive immunity
,
adjuvants
,
Adjuvants, Immunologic - administration & dosage
2014
•This paper provides a novel and original strategy to develop subunit vaccines for sublingual delivery.•Sublingual administration of subunit influenza Ags adjuvanted with LTK63 elicited comparable antibody titers to intramuscular immunization.•The sublingual delivery elicited Ag-specific mucosal IgA with neutralizing activity, contributing to anti-influenza defenses.•The mucosal route in combination with LTK63 elicited an Ag-specific Th17 response that might play a role in protection against influenza.•Sublingual delivery of an adjuvanted subunit influenza vaccine could be an effective alternative to conventional intramuscular vaccines.
Influenza is a vaccine-preventable disease that remains a major health problem world-wide. Needle and syringe are still the primary delivery devices, and injection of liquid vaccine into the muscle is still the primary route of immunization. Vaccines could be more convenient and effective if they were delivered by the mucosal route. Elicitation of systemic and mucosal innate and adaptive immune responses, such as pathogen neutralizing antibodies (including mucosal IgA at the site of pathogen entry) and CD4+ T-helper cells (especially the Th17 subset), have a critical role in vaccine-mediated protection. In the current study, a sublingual subunit influenza vaccine formulated with or without mucosal adjuvant was evaluated for systemic and mucosal immunogenicity and compared to intranasal and intramuscular vaccination. Sublingual administration of adjuvanted influenza vaccine elicited comparable antibody titers to those elicited by intramuscular immunization with conventional influenza vaccine. Furthermore, influenza-specific Th17 cells or neutralizing mucosal IgA were detected exclusively after mucosal immunization.
Journal Article
Positive Contribution of Adjuvanted Influenza Vaccines to the Resolution of Bacterial Superinfections
by
Bertholet, Sylvie
,
Zurli, Vanessa
,
Gallotta, Marilena
in
Adjuvants, Immunologic - administration & dosage
,
Animals
,
Bacterial Toxins - administration & dosage
2016
Background. Most preclinical studies assess vaccine effectiveness in single-pathogen infection models. This is unrealistic given that humans are continuously exposed to different commensals and pathogens in sequential and mixed infections. Accordingly, complications from secondary bacterial infection are a leading cause of influenza-associated morbidity and mortality. New vaccination strategies are needed to control infections on simultaneous fronts. Methods. We compared different anti-influenza vaccines for their protective potential in a model of viral infection with bacterial superinfection. Mice were immunized with H1N1/A/California/7/2009 subunit vaccines, formulated with different adjuvants inducing either T-helper type 1 (Th1) (MF59 plus CpG)–, Th1/2 (MF59)–, or Th17 (LTK63)–prone immune responses and were sequentially challenged with mouse-adapted influenza virus H1N1/A/Puerto Rico/8/1934 and Staphylococcus aureus USA300, a clonotype emerging as a leading contributor in postinfluenza pneumonia in humans. Results. Unadjuvanted vaccine controlled single viral infection, yet mice had considerable morbidity from viral disease and bacterial superinfection. In contrast, all adjuvanted vaccines efficiently protected mice in both conditions. Interestingly, the Th1-inducing formulation was superior to Th1/2 or Th17 inducers. Conclusions. Our studies should help us better understand how differential immunity to influenza skews immune responses toward coinfecting bacteria and discover novel modes to prevent bacterial superinfections in the lungs of persons with influenza.
Journal Article
A novel GMMA-based gonococcal vaccine demonstrates functional immune responses in mice
by
Angiolini, Francesca
,
Fontana, Lucia Eleonora
,
Matano, Christian
in
631/250/590
,
692/699/255/1318
,
Antigens
2025
Gonorrhea, caused by
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
(GC) represents a significant public health threat that may be mitigated by an effective vaccine. Vaccines containing
N. meningitidis
outer membrane vesicles (OMVs), such as 4CMenB, demonstrated moderate effectiveness in preventing GC infections. Here, we developed NgG, an investigational GC vaccine based on Generalized Modules for Membrane Antigens (GMMA). NgG includes genetically detoxified OMVs from the FA1090 strain, engineered to reduce endotoxin activity and limit immune interference. NgG induced a robust immune response in mice and outperformed the comparator vaccine 4CMenB in several serological and functional tests. Immunization with GMMA from a FA1090 mutant, where major oligosaccharide epitopes are incomplete or absent, revealed that NgG lipooligosaccharide plays a major role in the breadth of functional responses, with protein component also contributing in some GC strains. These results suggest that NgG has the potential to block GC infection through various mechanisms, supporting further vaccine development.
Journal Article
Global Survey of Outcomes of Neurocritical Care Patients: Analysis of the PRINCE Study Part 2
by
Taccone, Fabio Silvio
,
Georgiadis, Alexandros
,
Oddo, Mauro
in
Academic Medical Centers - statistics & numerical data
,
Adult
,
Aged
2020
Background
Neurocritical care is devoted to the care of critically ill patients with acute neurological or neurosurgical emergencies. There is limited information regarding epidemiological data, disease characteristics, variability of clinical care, and in-hospital mortality of neurocritically ill patients worldwide. We addressed these issues in the
P
oint P
R
evalence
I
n
N
eurocritical
C
ar
E
(PRINCE) study, a prospective, cross-sectional, observational study.
Methods
We recruited patients from various intensive care units (ICUs) admitted on a pre-specified date, and the investigators recorded specific clinical care activities they performed on the subjects during their first 7 days of admission or discharge (whichever came first) from their ICUs and at hospital discharge. In this manuscript, we analyzed the final data set of the study that included patient admission characteristics, disease type and severity, ICU resources, ICU and hospital length of stay, and in-hospital mortality. We present descriptive statistics to summarize data from the case report form. We tested differences between geographically grouped data using parametric and nonparametric testing as appropriate. We used a multivariable logistic regression model to evaluate factors associated with in-hospital mortality.
Results
We analyzed data from 1545 patients admitted to 147 participating sites from 31 countries of which most were from North America (69%,
N
= 1063). Globally, there was variability in patient characteristics, admission diagnosis, ICU treatment team and resource allocation, and in-hospital mortality. Seventy-three percent of the participating centers were academic, and the most common admitting diagnosis was subarachnoid hemorrhage (13%). The majority of patients were male (59%), a half of whom had at least two comorbidities, and median Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) of 13. Factors associated with in-hospital mortality included age (OR 1.03; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.04); lower GCS (OR 1.20; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.16 for every point reduction in GCS); pupillary reactivity (OR 1.8; 95% CI, 1.09 to 3.23 for bilateral unreactive pupils); admission source (emergency room versus direct admission [OR 2.2; 95% CI, 1.3 to 3.75]; admission from a general ward versus direct admission [OR 5.85; 95% CI, 2.75 to 12.45; and admission from another ICU versus direct admission [OR 3.34; 95% CI, 1.27 to 8.8]); and the absence of a dedicated neurocritical care unit (NCCU) (OR 1.7; 95% CI, 1.04 to 2.47).
Conclusion
PRINCE is the first study to evaluate care patterns of neurocritical patients worldwide. The data suggest that there is a wide variability in clinical care resources and patient characteristics. Neurological severity of illness and the absence of a dedicated NCCU are independent predictors of in-patient mortality.
Journal Article