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Effects of different immunomodulating liposome-based adjuvants and injection sites on immunogenicity in pigs. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vaccine adjuvants, particularly cationic adjuvant formulations (CAFs), enhance immune responses and can be tailored with different immunomodulators in various species, including humans and non-human primates, but less is known about their effects in pigs.
  • The study used commercial pigs to evaluate the effects of CAFs combined with specific immunomodulators and found that all adjuvants significantly boosted antigen-specific antibodies in serum, with certain injection methods yielding better results than others.
  • Results indicated that the immune responses to adjuvants in pigs do not translate as effectively from mouse models, suggesting that vaccine development should be species-specific for better predictive validity.

Article Abstract

Vaccine adjuvants, such as liposome-based cationic adjuvant formulations (CAFs), are able to boost immune responses and, by incorporation of distinct immunomodulators, steer immunity towards a desired direction in mice, non-human primates and humans, while less studied in pigs. Here we used commercial pigs to investigate polarizing adjuvant effects of CAFs with immunomodulators: C-type lectin receptor ligands trehalose-6,6'-dibehenate and monomycolyl glycerol, toll-like receptor 3 ligand Poly(I:C) or retinoic acid. Vaccines were formulated with a recombinant Chlamydia model protein antigen and administered via three injection routes. All adjuvants significantly increased antigen-specific IgG in serum, compared to non-adjuvanted antigen. Administering the vaccines through intramuscular and intraperitoneal routes induced significantly higher antigen-specific IgG and IgA serum antibodies, than the perirectal route. Although immunizations triggered cell-mediated immunity, no significant differences between adjuvants or injection sites were detected. Genes depicting T cell subtypes revealed only minor differences. Our findings suggest that specific signatures of the tested adjuvant immunomodulation do not translate well from mice to pigs in standard two-dose immunizations. This study provides new insights into immune responses to CAFs in pigs, and highlights that adjuvant development should ideally be carried out in the intended species of interest or in models with high predictive validity/translational value.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.micinf.2024.105346DOI Listing

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