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New nanoparticle for vaccine delivery developed at MIT

New nanoparticle for vaccine delivery developed at MIT

Immune cells, tagged with green fluorescent protein, are surrounded by nanoparticles (red), after the nanoparticles are injected into the skin of a mouse (Image: Peter DeMuth and James Moon)

Vaccines work by exposing the body to an infectious agent in order to prime the immune system to respond quickly when it encounters the pathogen again.

Some vaccines, such as the diphtheria vaccine, consist of a synthetic version of a protein or other molecule normally made by the pathogen, while others, such as the polio and smallpox vaccines, use a dead or disabled form of the virus. However, such an approach cannot be used with HIV because it’s difficult to render the virus harmless. MIT engineers have now developed a new type of nanoparticle that could safely and effectively deliver vaccines for infectious diseases such as HIV and malaria, and could even help scientists develop vaccines against cancer.

When designing a vaccine, scientists either try to provoke T cells, which attack body cells that have been infected with a pathogen, or B cells, which secrete antibodies that target viruses or bacteria present in the blood and other bodily fluids. However, for diseases such as HIV in which the pathogen tends to stay inside cells, a strong response from a type of T cell known as a “killer ” T cell is required.

The best way to provoke these killer T cells into action is to use a killed or disabled virus, but the difficulty in rendering HIV harmless and the danger of using live viruses has led to scientists working on synthetic vaccines for HIV and other viral infections, such as hepatitis B. However, while these synthetic vaccines are safer, they do not elicit a very strong T cell response.

Recently, scientists have tried encasing the vaccines in fatty droplets called liposomes, which could help promote T cell responses by packaging the protein in a virus-like particle. However, these liposomes have poor stability in blood and body fluids and tend to break down quickly inside the body.

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