A novel allergen-adjuvant conjugate suitable for specific immunotherapy of respiratory allergy
2013
Filì, Lucia | Vultaggio, Alessandra | Cardilicchia, Elisa | Manuelli, Cinzia | Casini, Andrea | Nencini, Francesca | Maggi, Laura | Pratesi, Sara | Petroni, Giulia | Boscaro, Francesca | Guarna, Antonio | Occhiato, Ernesto G. | Romagnani, S. (Sergio) | Maggi, Enrico | Parronchi, Paola
BACKGROUND: Several approaches to find a better adjuvant, focus immunomodulation, and reduce allergenicity are under investigation to improve the efficacy and safety of specific immunotherapy. OBJECTIVE: We performed an investigation of the in vitro and in vivo effects of a purified allergen chemically conjugated to a novel 8-OH modified adenine as an adjuvant. METHODS: Purified group 2 major allergen from house dust mite chemically conjugated to 4-(6-amino-9-benzyl-8-hydroxy-9H-purin-2-ylsulfanyl)-butyric acid succinimidyl ester was analyzed by using mass spectrometry. The adduct (nDer p 2–Conj) was assayed for Toll-like receptor activation on transfected HEK293 cells, stimulation of innate cells, and effects on the functional phenotype of specific T-cell lines and clones by means of flow cytometry, real-time PCR, and expression of TH-related transcription factors. Lung cells and sera of nDer p 2–Conj–sensitized C57Bl/6 mice were studied by means of cytology, histology, real-time PCR, and ELISA. RESULTS: nDer p 2–Conj stimulated IL-12 and IFN-α production from monocytes and plasmacytoid dendritic cells, respectively, retaining the ability to trigger Toll-like receptor 7 exclusively, and expanded human allergen-specific lymphocytes with reduced ability to produce TH2-related cytokines and increased IFN-γ levels, as based on GATA-3/T-bet expression. In vivo adduct-sensitized mice exhibited reduced eosinophil infiltration and IL-13 expression in the airways, IFN-γ upregulation together with IgE downregulation, and an increase in allergen-specific IgG₂ₐ levels in sera. The conjugate exhibited reduced ability to activate human FcεRI⁺ cells without inducing TH17 cells or autoantibodies. CONCLUSIONS: The codelivery of an allergen with a modified adenine as a conjugate inducing modulatory cytokines from innate cells redirects in vitro and in vivo pathogenic TH2 responses without eliciting harmful effects.
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