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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 101(37): 13601-6, 2004 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15342913

ABSTRACT

DNA vaccines provide an attractive technology platform against bioterrorism agents due to their safety record in humans and ease of construction, testing, and manufacture. We have designed monovalent and bivalent anthrax plasmid DNA (pDNA) vaccines encoding genetically detoxified protective antigen (PA) and lethal factor (LF) proteins and tested their immunogenicity and ability to protect rabbits from an aerosolized inhalation spore challenge. Immune responses after two or three injections of cationic lipid-formulated PA, PA plus LF, or LF pDNAs were at least equivalent to two doses of anthrax vaccine adsorbed (AVA). High titers of anti-PA, anti-LF, and neutralizing antibody to lethal toxin (Letx) were achieved in all rabbits. Eight or nine animals in each group were challenged with 100x LD(50) of aerosolized anthrax spores 5 or 9 weeks after vaccination. An additional 10 animals vaccinated with PA pDNA were challenged >7 months postvaccination. All animals receiving PA or PA plus LF pDNA vaccines were protected. In addition, 5 of 9 animals receiving LF pDNA survived, and the time to death was significantly delayed in the others. Groups receiving three immunizations with PA or PA plus LF pDNA showed no increase in anti-PA, anti-LF, or Letx neutralizing antibody titers postchallenge, suggesting little or no spore germination. In contrast, titer increases were seen in AVA animals, and in surviving animals vaccinated with LF pDNA alone. Preclinical evaluation of this cationic lipid-formulated bivalent PA and LF vaccine is complete, and the vaccine has received U.S. Food and Drug Administration Investigational New Drug allowance.


Subject(s)
Anthrax Vaccines/immunology , Anthrax/prevention & control , Antibodies, Bacterial/immunology , Bacillus anthracis/immunology , Lipids/chemistry , Spores, Bacterial/immunology , Vaccines, DNA/immunology , Aerosols , Animals , Anthrax/immunology , Anthrax Vaccines/chemistry , Anthrax Vaccines/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Antigens, Bacterial/immunology , Bacterial Toxins/genetics , Bacterial Toxins/immunology , Cations/chemistry , Gene Expression , Inhalation , Molecular Sequence Data , Plasmids/genetics , Rabbits , Vaccination , Vaccines, DNA/chemistry , Vaccines, DNA/genetics
2.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 29(7): 1539-48, 2001 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11266556

ABSTRACT

Using a group of structurally related cytofectins, the effects of different vehicle constituents and mixing techniques on the physical properties and biological activity of lipoplexes were systematically examined. Physical properties were examined using a combination of dye accessibility assays, centrifugation, gel electrophoresis and dynamic light scattering. Biological activity was examined using in vitro transfection. Lipoplexes were formulated using two injection vehicles commonly used for in vivo delivery (PBS pH 7.2 and 0.9% saline), and a sodium phosphate vehicle previously shown to enhance the biological activity of naked pDNA and lipoplex formulations. Phosphate was found to be unique in its effect on lipoplexes. Specifically, the accessible pDNA in lipoplexes formulated with cytofectins containing a gamma-amine substitution in the headgroup was dependent on alkyl side chain length and sodium phosphate concentration, but the same effects were not observed when using cytofectins containing a beta-OH headgroup substitution. The physicochemical features of the phosphate anion, which give rise to this effect in gamma-amine cytofectins, were deduced using a series of phosphate analogs. The effects of the formulation vehicle on transfection were found to be cell type-dependent; however, of the formulation variables examined, the liposome/pDNA mixing method had the greatest effect on transgene expression in vitro. Thus, though predictive physical structure relationships involving the vehicle and cytofectin components of the lipoplex were uncovered, they did not extrapolate to trends in biological activity.


Subject(s)
Lipids/chemistry , Liposomes/chemistry , Plasmids/genetics , Animals , Anions/pharmacology , Cell Line , Drug Carriers , Phosphates/pharmacology , Plasmids/chemistry , Plasmids/drug effects , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/drug effects , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology , Structure-Activity Relationship , Transfection/methods , Tumor Cells, Cultured , beta-Galactosidase/drug effects , beta-Galactosidase/genetics , beta-Galactosidase/metabolism
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