Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Development and Immunological Evaluation of a Multiantigen Thermostable Nanovaccine Adjuvanted with T-Cell-Activating Scaffold for African Swine Fever.
- Journal:
- ACS applied bio materials
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Sun, Lidan et al.
- Affiliation:
- College of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine · China
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
African swine fever is an acute and highly contagious infectious disease with a mortality rate of up to 100%. The lack of commercial vaccines and drugs is a serious economic threat to the global pig industry. Cell-mediated immunity plays an essential role in protection against viral infection. We previously reported the rational design of a T-cell-activating thermostable scaffold (RP) for antigen delivery and improved cellular immunity. We conjugated antigens P30, P54, P72, CD2 V, and CP312R to RP, using a SpyCatcher/SpyTag covalent attachment strategy to construct nanovaccines (multiantigens-RP). Multiantigens-RPexhibited significantly higher thermal, storage, and freeze-thaw stability. The specific antibodies IgG and IgG2a of the multiantigen-RP-immunized were higher than the antigens cocktail-immunized by approximately 10-100 times. ELISpot demonstrated that more IFN-γ-secreting cells were produced by the multiantigen-RP-immunized than by the antigens cocktail-immunized. Delivery of the multiantigen nanovaccine by a T-cell-activating scaffold induced strong humoral and cellular immune responses in mice and pigs and is a potentially useful candidate vaccine for the African swine fever virus.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38346262/