Published March 21, 2022
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Spherical nucleic acids as an infectious disease vaccine platform
Creators
- 1. Northwestern University
- 2. University of Chicago
Description
Despite recent efforts demonstrating that organization and presentation of vaccine components are just as important as composition in dictating vaccine efficacy, antiviral vaccines have long focused solely on the identification of the immunological target. Herein, we describe a study aimed at exploring how vaccine component presentation in the context of spherical nucleic acids (SNAs) can be used to elicit and maximize an antiviral response. Using COVID-19 as a topical example of an infectious disease with an urgent need for rapid vaccine development, we designed an antiviral SNA vaccine, encapsulating the receptor-binding domain (RBD) subunit into a liposome and decorating the core with a dense shell of CpG motif toll-like receptor 9 agonist oligonucleotides. This vaccine induces memory B cell formation in human cells, and in vivo administration into mice generates robust binding and neutralizing antibody titers. Moreover, the SNA vaccine outperforms multiple simple mixtures incorporating clinically employed adjuvants. Through modular changes to SNA structure, we uncover key relationships and proteomic insights between adjuvant and antigen ratios, concepts potentially translatable across vaccine platforms and disease models. Importantly, when humanized ACE2 transgenic mice were challenged in vivo against a lethal live virus, only mice that received the SNA vaccine had a 100% survival rate and lungs that were clear of virus by plaque analysis. This work underscores the potential for SNAs to be implemented as an easily adaptable and generalizable platform to fight infectious disease and demonstrates the importance of structure and presentation in the design of next-generation antiviral vaccines.
Data availability
All study data are included in the article and/or SI Appendix.
Files
teplensky-et-al-2022-spherical-nucleic-acids-as-an-infectious-disease-vaccine-platform.pdf
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Appendix md5:08062d451d34db7d75daa54308036545 |
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Article md5:2a35e623ce921164b6c07678080a8224 |
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1073/pnas.2119093119
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:9649
Funding
- Air Force
- Office of Scientific Research Award
- Northwestern University
- Polsky Urologic Cancer Institute of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center
- National Cancer Institute
- R01CA208783
- National Cancer Institute
- P50CA221747
- National Cancer Institute
- T32CA186897
- Unknown funder
- Dr. John N. Nicholson Fellowship
- University of Chicago
- Biological Sciences Division
- National Cancer Institute
- Cancer Center Support Grant
- National Institutes of Health
- Instrumentation Award
- National Resource for Translational and Developmental Proteomics
- P41 GM108569
- National Science Foundation
- ECCS-2025633
- State of Illinois
- International Institute for Nanotechnology