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      Titrating Polyarginine into Nanofibers Enhances Cyclic-Dinucleotide Adjuvanticity in Vitro and after Sublingual Immunization.

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          Abstract

          Effective sublingual peptide immunization requires overcoming challenges of both delivery and immunogenicity. Mucosal adjuvants, such as cyclic-dinucleotides (CDN), can promote sublingual immune responses but must be codelivered with the antigen to the epithelium for maximum effect. We designed peptide-polymer nanofibers (PEG-Q11) displaying nona-arginine (R9) at a high density to promote complexation with CDNs via bidentate hydrogen-bonding with arginine side chains. We coassembled PEG-Q11 and PEG-Q11R9 peptides to titrate the concentration of R9 within nanofibers. In vitro, PEG-Q11R9 fibers and cyclic-di-GMP or cyclic-di-AMP adjuvants had a synergistic effect on enhancing dendritic cell activation that was STING-dependent and increased monotonically with increasing R9 concentration. The polyvalent display of R9 on assembled nanofibers was significantly more effective at promoting CDN-mediated DC activation in vitro than mixing nanofibers with an equimolar concentration of unassembled R9 peptide. The sublingual administration of nanofibers revealed a bell-shaped trend between increasing R9 concentration and enhancements to antigen trafficking and the activation of DCs in the draining lymph nodes. Intermediate levels of R9 within sublingually administered PEG-Q11 fibers were optimal for immunization, suggesting a balance between polyarginine's ability to sequester CDNs along the nanofiber and its potentially detrimental mucoadhesive interactions. These findings present a potentially generalizable biomaterial strategy for enhancing the potency of CDN adjuvants and reveal important design considerations for the nascent field of sublingual biomaterial immunization.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          ACS Biomater Sci Eng
          ACS biomaterials science & engineering
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          2373-9878
          2373-9878
          May 10 2021
          : 7
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Biomedical Engineering Department, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, United States.
          Article
          NIHMS1771584
          10.1021/acsbiomaterials.0c01429
          8822437
          33775089
          23f8ad95-d615-4838-88c6-1e75223c5190
          History

          sublingual,biomaterials,adjuvant,STING,vaccine,polyarginine
          sublingual, biomaterials, adjuvant, STING, vaccine, polyarginine

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