Physicochemical Characterization Cascade of Nanoadjuvant-Antigen Systems for Improving Vaccines

Vaccines (Basel). 2021 May 21;9(6):544. doi: 10.3390/vaccines9060544.

Abstract

Adjuvants have been used for decades to enhance the immune response to vaccines, in particular for the subunit-based adjuvants. Physicochemical properties of the adjuvant-protein antigen complexes, such as size, morphology, protein structure and binding, influence the overall efficacy and safety of the vaccine. Here we show how to perform an accurate physicochemical characterization of the nanoaluminum-ovalbumin complex. Using a combination of existing techniques, we developed a multi-staged characterization strategy based on measurements of increased complexity. This characterization cascade has the advantage of being very flexible and easily adaptable to any adjuvant-protein antigen combinations. It will contribute to control the quality of antigen-adjuvant complexes and immunological outcomes, ultimately leading to improved vaccines.

Keywords: adjuvants; antigens; characterization; vaccines.