Nano-Self-Assemblies Based on Synthetic Analogues
of Mycobacterial Monomycoloyl Glycerol and DDA: Supramolecular Structure
and Adjuvant Efficacy
Version 2 2016-07-26, 11:56Version 2 2016-07-26, 11:56
Version 1 2016-07-20, 12:20Version 1 2016-07-20, 12:20
Posted on 2016-07-05 - 00:00
The
mycobacterial cell-wall lipid monomycoloyl glycerol (MMG) is
a potent immunostimulator, and cationic liposomes composed of a shorter
synthetic analogue (MMG-1) and dimethyldioctadecylammonium (DDA) bromide
represent a promising adjuvant that induces strong antigen-specific
Th1 and Th17 responses. In the present study, we investigated the
supramolecular structure and in vivo adjuvant activity
of dispersions based on binary mixtures of DDA and an array of synthetic
MMG-1 analogues (MMG-2/3/5/6) displaying longer (MMG-2) or shorter
(MMG-3) alkyl chain lengths, or variations in stereochemistry of the
polar headgroup (MMG-5) or of the hydrophobic moiety (MMG-6). Synchrotron
small-angle X-ray scattering experiments and cryo transmission electron
microscopy revealed that DDA:MMG-1/2/5/6 dispersions consisted of
unilamellar and multilamellar vesicles (ULVs/MLVs), whereas a coexistence
of both ULVs and hexosomes was observed for DDA:MMG-3, depending on
the DDA:MMG molar ratio. The studies also showed that ULVs were formed,
regardless of the structural characteristics of the neat MMG analogues
in excess buffer [lamellar (MMG-1/2/5) or inverse hexagonal (MMG-3/6)
phases]. Immunization of mice with a chlamydia antigen surface-adsorbed
to DDA:MMG-1/3/6 dispersions revealed that all tested adjuvants were
immunoactive and induced strong Th1 and Th17 responses with a potential
for a central effector memory profile. The MMG-1 and MMG-6 analogues
were equally immunoactive in vivo upon incorporation
into DDA liposomes, despite the reported highly different immunostimulatory
properties of the neat analogues in vitro, which
were attributed to the different nanostructural characteristics. This
clearly demonstrates that optimal formulation and delivery of MMG
analogues to the immune system is of major importance and challenges
the use of in vitro screening assays with nondispersed
compounds to identify potential new vaccine adjuvants.
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Martin-Bertelsen, Birte; S. Korsholm, Karen; Roces, Carla B.; Nielsen, Maja H.; Christensen, Dennis; Franzyk, Henrik; et al. (2016). Nano-Self-Assemblies Based on Synthetic Analogues
of Mycobacterial Monomycoloyl Glycerol and DDA: Supramolecular Structure
and Adjuvant Efficacy. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.6b00368Â