A Thermal-Stable Protein Nanoparticle That Stimulates Long Lasting Humoral Immune Response

Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Feb 13;11(2):426. doi: 10.3390/vaccines11020426.

Abstract

A thermally stable vaccine platform is considered the missing piece of vaccine technology. In this article, we reported the creation of a novel protein nanoparticle and assessed its ability to withstand extended high temperature incubation while stimulating a long-lasting humoral immune response. This protein nanoparticle was assembled from a fusion protein composed of an amphipathic helical peptide derived from the M2 protein of the H5N1 influenza virus (AH3) and a superfolder green fluorescent protein (sfGFP). Its proposed structure was modeled according to transmission electronic microscope (TEM) images of protein nanoparticles. From this proposed protein model, we created a mutant with two gain-of-function mutations that work synergistically on particle stability. A protein nanoparticle assembled from this gain-of-function mutant is able to remove a hydrophobic patch from its surface. This gain-of-function mutant also contributes to the higher thermostability of protein nanoparticles and stimulates a long lasting humoral immune response after a single immunization. This assembled nanoparticle showed increasing particle stability at higher temperatures and salt concentrations. This novel protein nanoparticle may serve as a thermally-stable platform for vaccine development.

Keywords: nanoparticle; self-assembled protein nanoparticle; thermal stable.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by SBIR from MOEA, Taiwan, grant number 1Z1060282, and University of Maryland Baltimore County STRT7TEN-1113 to T.-T.W.