Abstract

Polyanhydride nanoparticle-based vaccines (or nanovaccines) stabilize protein antigens, provide sustained antigen release leading to prolonged antigen presence, enhance activation of antigen presenting cells, and elicit protective immunity against respiratory infections upon challenge. However, induction of cell-mediated immunity when mice are immunized with polyanhydride nanovaccines has not been evaluated. Using a transgenic ovalbumin-specific T cell adoptive transfer model, we report the induction of antigen-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cells expressing an effector memory phenotype by seven days after immunization with nanovaccine formulations. Furthermore, mice immunized with polyanhydride nanovaccines demonstrated enhanced recall responses after antigen re-exposure 35 days post-immunization indicating the activation and recruitment of antigen-specific memory CD8+ T cells to the site of antigen deposition.

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