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Engineering complement activation on polypropylene sulfide vaccine nanoparticles

Year: 2011

Journal: Biomaterials, Volume 32, Issue 8, March 2011, Pages 2194-2203, 20110317

Authors: Thomas S.N. 1, van der Vlies A.J. 1, O'Neil C.P. 1, Reddy S.T. 1, Yu S.S. 3, Giorgio T.D. 3, Swartz M.A. 1 2, Hubbell J.A. 1 2

Last authors: Jeffrey A. Hubbell

Organizations: a Institute of Bioengineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Station 15, Lausanne CH 1015, Switzerland b Institute of Chemical Sciences and Engineering, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Vaud CH-1015, Switzerland c Department of Biomedical Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

Country: Switzerland

The complement system is an important regulator of both adaptive and innate immunity, implicating complement as a potential target for immunotherapeutics. We have recently presented lymph node-targeting, complement-activating nanoparticles (NPs) as a vaccine platform. Here we explore modulation of surface chemistry as a means to control complement deposition, in active or inactive forms, on polypropylene sulfide core, block copolymer Pluronic corona NPs. We found that nucleophile-containing NP surfaces activated complement and became functionalized in situ with C3 upon serum exposure via the alternative pathway. Carboxylated NPs displayed a higher degree of C3b deposition and retention relative to hydroxylated NPs, upon which deposited C3b was more substantially inactivated to iC3b. This in situ functionalization correlated with in vivo antigen-specific immune responses, including antibody production as well as T cell proliferation and IFN-γ cytokine production upon antigen restimulation. Interestingly, inactivation of C3b to iC3b on the NP surface did not correlate with NP affinity to factor H, a cofactor for protease factor I that degrades C3b into iC3b, indicating that control of complement protein C3 stability depends on architectural details in addition to factor H affinity. These data show that design of NP surface chemistry can be used to control biomaterials-associated complement activation for immunotherapeutic materials.