Engineered Immunogen Binding to Alum Adjuvant Enhances Humoral Immunity
February 17, 2020
Publication type
Journal Article
Journal
Nature Medicine
Volume and Number
26(3)
Authors
Moyer TJ, Kato Y, Abraham W, Chang JYH, Kulp DW, Watson N, Turner HL, Menis S, Abbott RK, Bhiman JN, Melo MB, Simon HA, Herrera-De la Mata S, Liang S, Seumois G, Agarwal Y, Li N, Burton DR, Ward AB, Schief WR, Crotty S, Irvine DJ
Abstract
Adjuvants are central to the efficacy of subunit vaccines. Aluminum hydroxide (alum) is the most commonly used vaccine adjuvant, yet its adjuvanticity is often weak and mechanisms of triggering antibody responses remain poorly understood. We demonstrate that site-specific modification of immunogens with short peptides composed of repeating phosphoserine (pSer) residues enhances binding to alum and prolongs immunogen bioavailability. The pSer-modified immunogens formulated in alum elicited greatly increased germinal center, antibody, neutralizing antibody, memory and long-lived plasma cell responses compared to conventional alum-adsorbed immunogens. Mechanistically, pSer-immunogen:alum complexes form nanoparticles that traffic to lymph nodes and trigger B cell activation through multivalent and oriented antigen display. Direct uptake of antigen-decorated alum particles by B cells upregulated antigen processing and presentation pathways, further enhancing B cell activation. These data provide insights into mechanisms of action of alum and introduce a readily translatable approach to significantly improve humoral immunity to subunit vaccines using a clinical adjuvant.