Noncovalent assembly of anti-dendritic cell antibodies and antigens for evoking immune responses in vitro and in vivo

Anne Laure Flamar, Sandra Zurawski, Felix Scholz, Ingrid Gayet, Ling Ni, Xiao Hua Li, Eynav Klechevsky, John Quinn, Sang Kon Oh, Daniel H Kaplan, Jacques Banchereau, Gerard Zurawski

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Targeting of Ags directly to dendritic cells (DCs) through anti-DC receptor Ab fused to Ag proteins is a promising approach to vaccine development. However, not all Ags can be expressed as a rAb directly fused to a protein Ag. In this study, we show that noncovalent assembly of Ab-Ag complexes, mediated by interaction between dockerin and cohesin domains from cellulose-degrading bacteria, can greatly expand the range of Ags for this DC-targeting vaccine technology. rAbs with a dockerin domain fused to the rAb H chain C terminus are efficiently secreted by mammalian cells, and many Ags not secreted as rAb fusion proteins are readily expressed as cohesin directly fused to Ag either via secretion from mammalian cells or as soluble cytoplasmic Escherichia coli products. These form very stable and homogeneous complexes with rAb fused to dockerin. In vitro, these complexes can efficiently bind to human DC receptors followed by presentation to Ag-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Low doses of the HA1 subunit of influenza hemagglutinin conjugated through this means to anti-Langerin rAbs elicited Flu HA1-specific Ab and T cell responses in mice. Thus, the noncovalent assembly of rAb and Ag through dockerin and cohesin interaction provides a useful modular strategy for development and testing of prototype vaccines for elicitation of Ag-specific T and B cell responses, particularly when direct rAb fusions to Ag cannot be expressed.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2645-2655
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume189
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2012

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Noncovalent assembly of anti-dendritic cell antibodies and antigens for evoking immune responses in vitro and in vivo'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this