Safety Assessment of a Sublingual Vaccine Formulated with Poly(I:C) Adjuvant and Influenza HA Antigen in Mice and Macaque Monkeys: Comparison with Intranasal Vaccine
Tetsuro Yamamoto, Fusako Mitsunaga, Atsushi Kotani, Kazuki Tajima, Kunihiko Wasaki, Shin Nakamura

TL;DR
This study compares the safety of sublingual and intranasal vaccines in mice and macaques, finding that sublingual vaccination avoids harmful brain inflammation linked to intranasal delivery.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel sublingual vaccine formulation and demonstrates its safety advantage over intranasal delivery in terms of brain inflammation.
Findings
Intranasal vaccination upregulated inflammation-related genes in the olfactory bulb and pons of mice and macaques.
Sublingual vaccination did not cause adverse effects in the brain regions tested in either species.
Intranasal vaccine effects in the lungs were transient and not observed at 7 days post-vaccination.
Abstract
A sublingual vaccine comprising the Poly(I:C) adjuvant and influenza HA antigen was evaluated for safety in both mice and macaque monkeys relative to its intranasal counterpart. Safety was assessed in terms of harmful effects corresponding to the upregulation of the inflammation-associated genes Saa3, Tnf, IL6, IL1b, Ccl2, Timp1, C2, Ifi47, Aif1, Omp, Nos2, and/or Gzmb in mice and SAA2, TNF, IL6, IL1B, CCL2, TIMP, C2, AIF1, and GZMB in macaques. Quantitative gene expression analyses were performed using RT-qPCR with RNA samples from four tissue types, the olfactory bulb, pons, lung, tongue, and lymph node, from both mice and macaques. In mice, the intranasally delivered vaccine markedly upregulated the inflammation-related genes in the olfactory bulb 1 day and 7 days after vaccination. The adverse effects of intranasal vaccination were also observed in macaques, albeit to a lesser…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Immune Response and Inflammation · Immunotherapy and Immune Responses
