Issue 1, 2013

Factors affecting T cell responses induced by fully synthetic glyco-gold-nanoparticles

Abstract

We have synthesized and characterized nearly monodisperse and highly pure gold nanoparticles (2 and 5 nm) coated with non-immunoactive mono- and disaccharides, modelled after the capsular polysaccharide of serogroup A of the Neisseria meningitidis bacterium. We have used them to test their ability to induce immune cell responses as a consequence of their multivalency. The results indicate that they are indeed immunoactive and that immunoactivity is strongly dependent on size, and larger, 5 nm nanoparticles perform far better than smaller, 2 nm ones. Immune response (activation of macrophages) initiates with the whole nanoparticle recognition by the surface of antigen-presenting cells, independent of the saccharide oligomerization (or charge) on the nanoparticle surface. The induction of T cell proliferation and the increase of IL-2 levels, a consequence of the expression of MHC II involved in antigen presentation, require the presence of a disaccharide on the nanoparticle, not just a monosaccharide. A possible explanation is that, at this stage, the saccharides are detached from the gold surface. These results may provide leads for designing new saccharide-based, nanoparticle-conjugate vaccines.

Graphical abstract: Factors affecting T cell responses induced by fully synthetic glyco-gold-nanoparticles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Aug 2012
Accepted
29 Oct 2012
First published
08 Nov 2012

Nanoscale, 2013,5, 390-400

Factors affecting T cell responses induced by fully synthetic glyco-gold-nanoparticles

S. Fallarini, T. Paoletti, C. O. Battaglini, P. Ronchi, L. Lay, R. Bonomi, S. Jha, F. Mancin, P. Scrimin and G. Lombardi, Nanoscale, 2013, 5, 390 DOI: 10.1039/C2NR32338A

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