Mosaic quadrivalent influenza vaccine single nanoparticle characterization

Rong Yang(National Institutes of Health), Maria Traver, Nathan Barefoot(National Institutes of Health), Tyler Stephens(Leidos (United States)), Casper Alabanza(National Institutes of Health), Javier Manzella‐Lapeira, Guozhang Zou(National Institutes of Health), Jeremy J. Wolff(National Institutes of Health), Yile Li(National Institutes of Health), Melissa Resto(National Institutes of Health), William R. Shadrick(National Institutes of Health), Yanhong Yang(National Institutes of Health), Vera B. Ivleva(National Institutes of Health), Yaroslav Tsybovsky(Leidos (United States)), Kevin Carlton(National Institutes of Health), Joseph Brzostowski, Jason G. Gall(National Institutes of Health), Q. Paula Lei(National Institutes of Health)
Scientific Reports
February 24, 2024
Cited by 12Open Access
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Abstract

Recent work by our laboratory and others indicates that co-display of multiple antigens on protein-based nanoparticles may be key to induce cross-reactive antibodies that provide broad protection against disease. To reach the ultimate goal of a universal vaccine for seasonal influenza, a mosaic influenza nanoparticle vaccine (FluMos-v1) was developed for clinical trial (NCT04896086). FluMos-v1 is unique in that it is designed to co-display four recently circulating haemagglutinin (HA) strains; however, current vaccine analysis techniques are limited to nanoparticle population analysis, thus, are unable to determine the valency of an individual nanoparticle. For the first time, we demonstrate by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy and supportive physical-chemical methods that the co-display of four antigens is indeed achieved in single nanoparticles. Additionally, we have determined percentages of multivalent (mosaic) nanoparticles with four, three, or two HA proteins. The integrated imaging and physicochemical methods we have developed for single nanoparticle multivalency will serve to further understand immunogenicity data from our current FluMos-v1 clinical trial.


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