Author:
Luo Xin,McAndrews Kathleen M.,Arian Kent A.,Morse Sami J.,Boeker Viktoria,Kumbhar Shreyasee V.,Hu Yingying,Mahadevan Krishnan K.,Church Kaira A.,Chitta Sriram,Ryujin Nicolas T.,Hensel Janine,Dai Jianli,Dowlatshahi Dara P.,Sugimoto Hikaru,Kirtley Michelle L.,LeBleu Valerie S.,Shalapour Shabnam,Simmons Joe H.,Kalluri Raghu
Abstract
AbstractmRNA incorporated in lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) became a new class of vaccine modality for induction of immunity against COVID-19 and ushered in a new era in vaccine development. Here, we report a novel, easy-to-execute, and cost effective engineered extracellular vesicles (EVs)-based combined mRNA and protein vaccine platform (EVX-M+Pvaccine) and explore its utility in proof-of-concept immunity studies in the settings of cancer and infectious disease. As a first example, we engineered EVs to contain ovalbumin mRNA and protein (EVOvaM+P) to serve as cancer vaccine against ovalbumin-expressing melanoma tumors. EVOvaM+Padministration to mice with established melanoma tumors resulted in tumor regression associated with effective humoral and adaptive immune responses. As a second example, we generated engineered EVs, natural nanoparticle carriers shed by all cells, that contain mRNA and protein Spike (S) protein to serve as a combined mRNA and protein vaccine (EVSpikeM+Pvaccine) against SARS-CoV-2 infection. EVSpikeM+Pvaccine administration in mice and baboons elicited robust production of neutralizing IgG antibodies against RBD (receptor binding domain) of S protein and S protein specific T cell responses. Our proof-of-concept study describes a new platform with an ability for rapid development of combination mRNA and protein vaccines employing EVs for deployment against cancer and other diseases.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory