Abstract

Successful use of liposomes as immunological adjuvants in vaccines requires simple, easy to scale up technology capable of high-yield antigen entrapment. Recent work from this laboratory has led to the development of techniques that can generate liposomes of various sizes containing soluble antigens such as proteins or particulate antigens such as whole, live, or attenuated bacteria or viruses. Entrapment of proteins is carried out by the dehydration-rehydration procedure, which entails freeze-drying of a mixture of "empty" small unilamellar vesicles and free antigens. Upon rehydration, the large multilamellar vesicles that are formed incorporate up to 80% of the antigen used. When such liposomes are microfluidized in the presence of nonentrapped material, their size is reduced to about 100 nm in diameter, with much of the originally entrapped antigen still associated with the vesicles. A similar technique applied to the entrapment of particulate antigens (e.g., Bacillus subtilis spores) consists of freeze-drying giant vesicles (4-5 μm in diameter) in the presence of spores. On rehydration and sucrose gradient fractionation of the suspension, up to 27% of the spores used are associated with generated giant liposomes of similar mean size.

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