Comparison of immune responses in guinea pigs by intranasal delivery with different nanoparticles-loaded FMDV DNA vaccine.

Journal: Microbial Pathogenesis
Published:
Abstract

To compare different nanoparticle-based nasal vaccines against foot-and-mouth disease (FMD), chitosan (CS)-coated poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles (NPs) (CS/PLGA-NPs) and amino-functionalized mesoporous silica nanoparticles (Am/MSNs) loaded with FMDV recombinant plasmid (pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs and pP12A3C/IFN-Am/MS-NPs) were used to induce mucosal and systemic immune responses in guinea pigs via intranasal delivery. Simultaneously, CpG oligodeoxy nucleotides (ODNs) as a vaccine adjuvant were encapsulated in chitosan-coated poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) nanoparticles (CpG-CS/PLGA-NPs). The pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs and CpG-CS/PLGA-NPs generated displayed good morphology, high stability, mean diameters of 500 and 400 nm and encapsulation efficiencies of 83.8% and 88.4%, respectively. Data from the in vitro release assay showed that plasmid and CpG were sustainably released from nanoparticles (up to 66.73% and 64%, respectively, of the total amount loaded). Guinea pigs immunized with pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs + CpG-CS/PLGA-NPs showed markedly higher mucosal, cellular and humoral immune responses than those administered pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs or naked plasmid vaccine alone. FMDV-specific secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA) antibodies in nasal washes were initially detected at 3 days post-vaccination with CS/PLGA-NPs loaded with plasmid. Guinea pigs immunized with pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs also displayed higher cellular and humoral immune responses than pP12A3C-CS/PLGA-NPs and naked plasmid vaccine alone. FMDV-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in serum were initially detected at 5 days post-vaccination (intramuscularly) with the naked plasmid. Finally, challenge experiments 42 days post-vaccine revealed 100% protection in guinea pigs immunized with pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs + CpG-CS/PLGA-NPs and pP12A3C/IFN-CS/PLGA-NPs. However, plasmid DNA was burst released from pP12A3C/IFN-Am/MS-NPs. Our attempts to use pP12A3C/IFN-Am/MS-NPs to immunize guinea pigs failed to induce immune responses. In conclusion, CpG and IFN-α adjuvant based FMD vaccines elicit protection in guinea pigs. Moreover, CS-coated PLGA NPs present an efficient and safe mucosal immune delivery system for FMDV DNA vaccine. Data from the current study provide a foundation for understanding and further evaluating protective immune responses in pigs.

Authors
Huabin Zheng, Li Pan, Jianliang Lv, Zhongwang Zhang, Yuanyuan Wang, Wenfa Hu, Xinsheng Liu, Peng Zhou, Yonglu Wang, Yongguang Zhang