Covalent conjugation of small-molecule adjuvants to nanoparticles induces robust cytotoxic T cell responses via DC activation

WG Kim, B Choi, HJ Yang, JA Han, H Jung… - Bioconjugate …, 2016 - ACS Publications
WG Kim, B Choi, HJ Yang, JA Han, H Jung, HJ Cho, S Kang, SY Hong
Bioconjugate Chemistry, 2016ACS Publications
Specific recognitions of pathogen associated molecular patterns by Toll-like receptors
(TLRs) initiate dendritic cell (DC) activation, which is critical for coordinating innate and
adaptive immune responses. Imidazoquinolines as small-molecule TLR7 agonists often
suffer from prompt dissemination and short half-life in the bloodstream, preventing their
localization to the corresponding receptors and effective DC activation. We postulated that
covalent incorporation of imidazoquinoline moieties onto the surface of biocompatible …
Specific recognitions of pathogen associated molecular patterns by Toll-like receptors (TLRs) initiate dendritic cell (DC) activation, which is critical for coordinating innate and adaptive immune responses. Imidazoquinolines as small-molecule TLR7 agonists often suffer from prompt dissemination and short half-life in the bloodstream, preventing their localization to the corresponding receptors and effective DC activation. We postulated that covalent incorporation of imidazoquinoline moieties onto the surface of biocompatible nanoparticles (∼30 nm size) would enhance their chemical stability, cellular uptake efficiency, and adjuvanticity. The fully synthetic adjuvant-nanocomplexes led to successful DC activation at lower nanomolar doses compared with free small-molecule agonists. Once a model antigen such as ovalbumin was used for immunization, we found that the nanocomplexes promoted an unusually strong cytotoxic T lymphocyte response, revealing their unique immunostimulatory capacity benefiting from multivalency and efficient transport to endosomal TLR7.
ACS Publications