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"OMV"
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Correction: Protection against N. gonorrhoeae induced by OMV-based meningococcal vaccines are associated with cross-species directed humoral and cellular immune responses
by
Gray, Mary C.
,
Waltmann, Andreea
,
Sikora, Aleksandra E.
in
correlates of protection
,
Immunology
,
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
2025
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2025.1539795.].
Journal Article
Bacterial Outer Membrane Vesicles as a Platform for the Development of a Broadly Protective Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Based on the Minor Capsid Protein L2
by
Zanella, Ilaria
,
Grandi, Alberto
,
Tamburini, Silvia
in
Adjuvanticity
,
Amino acids
,
Antibodies
2023
Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) are a large family of viruses with a capsid composed of the L1 and L2 proteins, which bind to receptors of the basal epithelial cells and promote virus entry. The majority of sexually active people become exposed to HPV and the virus is the most common cause of cervical cancer. Vaccines are available based on the L1 protein, which self-assembles and forms virus-like particles (VLPs) when expressed in yeast and insect cells. Although very effective, these vaccines are HPV type-restricted and their costs limit broad vaccination campaigns. Recently, vaccine candidates based on the conserved L2 epitope from serotypes 16, 18, 31, 33, 35, 6, 51, and 59 were shown to elicit broadly neutralizing anti-HPV antibodies. In this study, we tested whether E. coli outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) could be successfully decorated with L2 polytopes and whether the engineered OMVs could induce neutralizing antibodies. OMVs represent an attractive vaccine platform owing to their intrinsic adjuvanticity and their low production costs. We show that strings of L2 epitopes could be efficiently expressed on the surface of the OMVs and a polypeptide composed of the L2 epitopes from serotypes 18, 33, 35, and 59 provided a broad cross-protective activity against a large panel of HPV serotypes as determined using pseudovirus neutralization assay. Considering the simplicity of the OMV production process, our work provides a highly effective and inexpensive solution to produce universal anti-HPV vaccines.
Journal Article
OMV Vaccines and the Role of TLR Agonists in Immune Response
by
Necchi, Francesca
,
Mancini, Francesca
,
Micoli, Francesca
in
Adaptive Immunity
,
Agonists
,
Animals
2020
Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) are bacterial nanoparticles that are spontaneously released during growth both in vitro and in vivo by Gram-negative bacteria. They are spherical, bilayered membrane nanostructures that contain many components found within the external surface of the parent bacterium. Naturally, OMVs serve the bacteria as a mechanism to deliver DNA, RNA, proteins, and toxins, as well as to promote biofilm formation and remodel the outer membrane during growth. On the other hand, as OMVs possess the optimal size to be uptaken by immune cells, and present a range of surface-exposed antigens in native conformation and Toll-like receptor (TLR) activating components, they represent an attractive and powerful vaccine platform able to induce both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses. This work reviews the TLR-agonists expressed on OMVs and their capability to trigger individual TLRs expressed on different cell types of the immune system, and then focuses on their impact on the immune responses elicited by OMVs compared to traditional vaccines.
Journal Article
The tremendous biomedical potential of bacterial extracellular vesicles
by
Haesebrouck, Freddy
,
Xie, Junhua
,
Li, Qiqiong
in
Alzheimer's disease
,
antibacterial
,
Antigens
2022
Bacterial extracellular vesicles (bEVs) are nano-sized, lipid membrane-delimited particles filled with bacteria-derived components. They have important roles in the physiology and pathogenesis of bacteria, and in bacteria–bacteria and bacteria–host interactions. Interestingly, recent advances in biotechnology have made it possible to engineer the bEV surface and decorate it with diverse biomolecules and nanoparticles (NPs). bEVs have been the focus of significant interest in a range of biomedical fields and are being evaluated as vaccines, cancer immunotherapy agents, and drug delivery vehicles. However, significant hurdles in terms of their safety, efficacy, and mass production need to be addressed to enable their full clinical potential. Here, we review recent advances and remaining obstacles regarding the use of bEVs in different biomedical applications and discuss paths toward clinical translation.
Bacterial extracellular vesicles (bEVs) are released by Gram-negative and specific Gram-positive bacteria and have a role in bacteria–bacteria and bacteria–host interactions.The functional versatility of bEVs, their nonreplicative nature, intrinsic cell-targeting properties, and ability to overcome natural barriers endow them with promising potential for different biomedical applications.Standardized and efficient separation of bEVs from matrices containing contaminants, such as EVs and lipoproteins, remains a challenge.Techniques for isolating and analyzing bEV subtypes are needed.Both natural and modified bEVs are under development for various biomedical applications, including for vaccination, cancer immunotherapy, and drug delivery, and as antibacterial agents and diagnostics.Clinical use of bEVs to replace, or to combine with, traditional drugs and therapies may improve therapeutic outcomes.
Journal Article
GMMA Is a Versatile Platform to Design Effective Multivalent Combination Vaccines
by
Saul, Allan
,
Gasperini, Gianmarco
,
Alfini, Renzo
in
glycoconjugate
,
GMMA
,
Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMV)
2020
Technology platforms are an important strategy to facilitate the design, development and implementation of vaccines to combat high-burden diseases that are still a threat for human populations, especially in low- and middle-income countries, and to address the increasing number and global distribution of pathogens resistant to antimicrobial drugs. Generalized Modules for Membrane Antigens (GMMA), outer membrane vesicles derived from engineered Gram-negative bacteria, represent an attractive technology to design affordable vaccines. Here, we show that GMMA, decorated with heterologous polysaccharide or protein antigens, leads to a strong and effective antigen-specific humoral immune response in mice. Importantly, GMMA promote enhanced immunogenicity compared to traditional formulations (e.g., recombinant proteins and glycoconjugate vaccines), without negative impact to the anti-GMMA immune response. Our findings support the use of GMMA as a “plug and play” technology for the development of effective combination vaccines targeting different bugs at the same time.
Journal Article
Bacterial Outer Membrane Vesicles: From Physics to Clinical
2025
Bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) are nanoscale vesicular structures naturally produced by Gram‐negative bacteria during growth. These vesicles encapsulate a diverse array of bioactive molecules, including proteins, nucleic acids, and lipopolysaccharide, contributing to a range of bacterial processes such as toxin delivery, horizontal gene transfer, and biofilm formation. OMVs play crucial roles in bacterial pathogenesis and host immune modulation, and their presence is implicated in a variety of clinical conditions affecting the respiratory, gastrointestinal, immune, cardiovascular, and urinary systems. The unique properties of OMVs offer promising avenues for clinical translation, including their use as vaccines (against bacterial, viral, parasitic, and tumor‐associated), diagnostic tools (for bioimaging and molecular diagnostics), drug delivery vehicles (for antibiotics, anti‐cancer therapeutics, and nucleic acids) and regenerative medicine. However, several challenges hinder the widespread clinical adoption of OMVs, including heterogeneity in composition depending on growth conditions, incompletely understood mechanisms of cargo loading and release, inherent immunogenicity and potential toxicity, and limitations in scalable production. This review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of OMVs biogenesis, composition, function, and association with human disease, while also exploring current challenges and future development directions for clinical application. A review of an introduction to the mechanisms of formation of OMVs, their action on bacteria and relationship to disease, vaccines, biomonitoring, drug delivery and regenerative medicine in the clinic.
Journal Article
Robust Immune Response Induced by Schistosoma mansoni TSP-2 Antigen Coupled to Bacterial Outer Membrane Vesicles
2021
The use of adjuvants can significantly strengthen a vaccine's efficacy. We sought to explore the immunization efficacy of bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) displaying the
antigen, SmTSP-2, through a biotin-rhizavidin coupling approach. The rationale is to exploit the nanoparticulate structure and the adjuvant properties of OMVs to induce a robust antigen-specific immune response, in light of developing new vaccines against
OMVs were obtained from
and conjugated with biotin. The recombinant SmTSP-2 in fusion with the biotin-binding protein rhizavidin (rRzvSmTSP-2) was produced in
and coupled to biotinylated OMVs to generate an OMV complex displaying SmTSP-2 on the membrane surface (OMV:rSmTSP-2). Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and dynamic light scattering analysis were used to determine particle charge and size. The immunogenicity of the vaccine complex was evaluated in C57BL/6 mice.
The rRzvSmTSP-2 protein was successfully coupled to biotinylated OMVs and purified by size-exclusion chromatography. The OMV:rSmTSP-2 nanoparticles showed an average size of 200 nm, with zeta potential around - 28 mV. Mouse Bone Marrow Dendritic Cells were activated by the nanoparticles as determined by increased expression of the co-stimulatory molecules CD40 and CD86, and the proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6 and IL-12) or IL-10. Splenocytes of mice immunized with OMV:rSmTSP-2 nanoparticles reacted to an in vitro challenge with SmTSP-2 with an increased production of IL-6, IL-10 and IL-17 and displayed a higher number of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes expressing IFN-γ, IL-4 and IL-2, compared to mice immunized with the antigen alone. Immunization of mice with OMV:rSmTSP-2 induced a 100-fold increase in specific anti-SmTSP-2 IgG antibody titers, as compared to the group receiving the recombinant rSmTSP-2 protein alone or even co-administered with unconjugated OMV.
Our results demonstrate that the SmTSP-2 antigen coupled with OMVs is highly immunogenic in mice, supporting the potential effectiveness of this platform for improved antigen delivery in novel vaccine strategies.
Journal Article
Multi-Antigen Outer Membrane Vesicle Engineering to Develop Polyvalent Vaccines: The Staphylococcus aureus Case
by
König, Enrico
,
Fantappiè, Laura
,
Zanella, Ilaria
in
Adjuvanticity
,
Animals
,
Antibodies, Bacterial - blood
2021
Modification of surface antigens and differential expression of virulence factors are frequent strategies pathogens adopt to escape the host immune system. These escape mechanisms make pathogens a “moving target” for our immune system and represent a challenge for the development of vaccines, which require more than one antigen to be efficacious. Therefore, the availability of strategies, which simplify vaccine design, is highly desirable. Bacterial Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) are a promising vaccine platform for their built-in adjuvanticity, ease of purification and flexibility to be engineered with foreign proteins. However, data on if and how OMVs can be engineered with multiple antigens is limited. In this work, we report a multi-antigen expression strategy based on the co-expression of two chimeras, each constituted by head-to-tail fusions of immunogenic proteins, in the same OMV-producing strain. We tested the strategy to develop a vaccine against Staphylococcus aureus , a Gram-positive human pathogen responsible for a large number of community and hospital-acquired diseases. Here we describe an OMV-based vaccine in which four S. aureus virulent factors, ClfA Y338A , LukE, SpA KKAA and Hla H35L have been co-expressed in the same OMVs (CLSH-OMVs Δ60 ). The vaccine elicited antigen-specific antibodies with functional activity, as judged by their capacity to promote opsonophagocytosis and to inhibit Hla-mediated hemolysis, LukED-mediated leukocyte killing, and ClfA-mediated S. aureus binding to fibrinogen. Mice vaccinated with CLSH-OMVs Δ60 were robustly protected from S. aureus challenge in the skin, sepsis and kidney abscess models. This study not only describes a generalized approach to develop easy-to-produce and inexpensive multi-component vaccines, but also proposes a new tetravalent vaccine candidate ready to move to development.
Journal Article
Microbe-Host Communication by Small RNAs in Extracellular Vesicles: Vehicles for Transkingdom RNA Transportation
2019
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are evolutionary well-conserved nano-sized membranous vesicles that are secreted by both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Recently, they have gained great attention for their proposed roles in cell-to-cell communication, and as biomarkers for human disease. In particular, small RNAs (sRNAs) contained within EVs have been considered as candidate interspecies-communication molecules, due to their demonstrated capacity to modulate gene expression in multiple cell types and species. While research into this field is in its infancy, elucidating the mechanisms that underlie host–microbe interactions and communications promises to impact many fields of biological research, including human health and medicine. Thus, this review discussed the results of recent studies that have examined the ways in which EVs and sRNAs mediate ‘microbe–host’ and ‘host–microbe’ interspecies communication.
Journal Article
Vaccine value profile for Neisseria gonorrhoeae
by
Choong, Annabelle
,
Wi, Teodora
,
Gottlieb, Sami L.
in
Allergy and Immunology
,
antibiotic resistance
,
Antibiotics
2024
Neisseria gonorrhoeae infection (gonorrhoea) is a global public health challenge, causing substantial sexual and reproductive health consequences, such as infertility, pregnancy complications and increased acquisition or transmission of HIV. There is an urgency to controlling gonorrhoea because of increasing antimicrobial resistance to ceftriaxone, the last remaining treatment option, and the potential for gonorrhoea to become untreatable. No licensed gonococcal vaccine is available. Mounting observational evidence suggests that N. meningitidis serogroup B outer membrane vesicle-based vaccines may induce cross-protection against N. gonorrhoeae (estimated 30%–40% effectiveness using the 4CMenB vaccine). Clinical trials to determine the efficacy of the 4CMenB vaccine against N. gonorrhoeae are underway, as are Phase 1/2 studies of a new gonococcal-specific vaccine candidate. Ultimately, a gonococcal vaccine must be accessible, affordable and equitably dispensed, given that those most affected by gonorrhoea are also those who may be most disadvantaged in our societies, and most cases are in less-resourced settings.
This vaccine value profile (VVP) provides a high level, holistic assessment of the current data to inform the potential public health, economic and societal value of pipeline vaccines. This was developed by a working group of subject matter experts from academia, non-profit organizations, public private partnerships and multi-lateral organizations. All contributors have extensive expertise on various elements of the N. gonorrhoeae VVP and collectively aimed to identify current research and knowledge gaps. The VVP was developed using published data obtained from peer-reviewed journals or reports.
Journal Article