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Bypassing luminal barriers, delivery to a gut addressin by parenteral targeting elicits local IgA responses

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journal contribution
posted on 2004-10-05, 00:00 authored by B McKenzie, A Corbett, Susan Johnson, J Brady, J Pleasance, David Kramer, J Boyle, D Jackson, R Strugnell, A Lew
Induction of mucosal immunity, particularly to subunit vaccines, has been problematic. The primary hurdle to successful mucosal vaccination is the effective delivery of vaccine antigen to the mucosal associated lymphoid tissue. Physical and chemical barriers restrict antigen access and, moreover, immune responses induced in the mucosa can be biased towards tolerance or non-reactivity. We proposed that these difficulties could be circumvented by targeting antigen to the gastrointestinal associated lymphoid tissue via systemic (parenteral) rather than alimentary routes, using antibodies specific for the mucosal addressin cellular adhesion molecule-1 (MAdCAM). After intravenous or intramuscular injection of such rat antibodies in mice, we found a greatly enhanced (up to 3 logs) anti-rat antibody response. MAdCAM targeting induces a rapid IgA antibody response in the gut and vastly improves the systemic antibody response. Targeting also enhanced T cell proliferation and cytokine responses. Parenteral targeting of mucosal addressins may represent a generic technique for bypassing mucosal barriers and eliminating the need for adjuvants in the induction of proximal and systemic immunity.

History

Journal

International immunology

Volume

16

Pagination

1613 - 1622

Location

Oxford, England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0953-8178

eISSN

1460-2377

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Japanese Society for Immunology

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