Modulation of lipid nanoparticle-formulated plasmid DNA drives innate immune activation promoting adaptive immunity.

Journal: Cell Reports. Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Nucleic acid vaccines have grown in importance over the past several years, with the development of new approaches remaining a focus. We describe a lipid nanoparticle-formulated DNA (DNA-LNP) formulation which induces robust innate and adaptive immunity with similar serological potency to mRNA-LNPs and adjuvanted protein. Using an influenza hemagglutinin (HA)-encoding construct, we show that priming with our HA DNA-LNP demonstrated stimulator of interferon genes (STING)-dependent upregulation and activation of migratory dendritic cell (DC) subpopulations. HA DNA-LNP induced superior antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses relative to mRNA-LNPs or adjuvanted protein, with memory responses persisting beyond one year. In rabbits immunized with HA DNA-LNP, we observed immune responses comparable or superior to mRNA-LNPs at the same dose. In an additional model, a SARS-CoV-2 spike-encoding DNA-LNP elicited protective efficacy comparable to spike mRNA-LNPs. Our study identifies a platform-specific priming mechanism for DNA-LNPs divergent from mRNA-LNPs or adjuvanted protein, suggesting avenues for this approach in prophylactic and therapeutic vaccine development.

Authors
Nicholas Tursi, Sachchidanand Tiwari, Nicole Bedanova, Toshitha Kannan, Elizabeth Parzych, Nisreen Okba, Kevin Liaw, András Sárközy, Cory Livingston, Maria Trullen, Ebony Gary, Máté Vadovics, Niklas Laenger, Jennifer Londregan, Mohammad Khan, Serena Omo Lamai, Hiromi Muramatsu, Kerry Blatney, Casey Hojecki, Viviane Machado, Igor Maricic, Trevor R Smith, Laurent Humeau, Ami Patel, Andrew Kossenkov, Jacob Brenner, David Allman, Florian Krammer, Norbert Pardi, David Weiner