Date13th, Jul 2019

Summary:

Brazilian and European researchers have demonstrated exactly how a nanotechnology-based compound delivers an oral vaccine against hepatitis B to the immune system. When particles containing silica and...

Full text:

Home > Press > Nanotechnology delivers hepatitis B vaccine: X-ray imaging shows that nanostructured silica acts as a protective vehicle to deliver intact antigen to the intestine so that it can trigger an immune response. The material can give rise to a polyvaccine against six diseases

Abstract: Brazilian and European researchers have demonstrated exactly how a nanotechnology-based compound delivers an oral vaccine against hepatitis B to the immune system. When particles containing silica and an antigen combine, even though they are different sizes, they reach the intestine without being destroyed by the acidity of the digestive system.

S�o Paulo, Brasil | Posted on July 12th, 2019

A compound of nanostructured SBA-15 silica and HBsAg, the hepatitis B surface antigen, was submitted to different types of X-ray imaging in European laboratories.

The nanostructured silica was developed by researchers at the University of S�o Paulo's Physics Institute (IF-USP) in Brazil. The antigen was created by the Butantan Institute, which is also in S�o Paulo.

The study was supported by S�o Paulo Research Foundation - FAPESP and European research funders. The results are published in Scientific Reports.

The aim of the study was to understand how 22 nanometers-sized antigen binds to silica nanotubes with a diameter of approximately 10 nanometers and a honeycomb-like structure. One nanometer (1 nm) is a billionth of a meter.

Studies carried out at USP revealed the measurements of both the antigen and the silica nanotubes using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), dynamic light scattering (DLS), and transmission electron microscope.

"Despite the size difference, tests [in animals] produced an excellent immune response to the oral vaccine - as good as the injectable form or better," said M�rcia Fantini, Full Professor at IF-USP.

X-ray and neutron imaging was coordinated by Heloisa Bordalo, a Brazilian researcher at the University of Copenhagen's Niels Bohr Institute in Denmark. In collaboration with other researchers in Denmark as well as colleagues in France, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland, Bordalo submitted the compound to small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), among other techniques.

The three-dimensional images obtained by these techniques showed that although the antigen did not enter the nanotubes, it was retained in 50 nm macropores between the nanotubes. This protected it from the acidity of the digestive system.

The images also enabled the researchers to determine the ideal proportion of silica and HBsAg so that the antigen did not agglomerate, hindering the dispersion of the active principle in the patient's intestine.

"The oral and intranasal routes are natural modes of vaccine administration. Nature is the best vaccination agent. However, a vaccine that contains a protein, as in this case, is destroyed by high acidity and its own proteases in passing through the stomach, so it doesn't reach the immune system, particularly the small intestine," said Osvaldo Augusto Sant'Anna, Scientific Leader at Butantan Institute and responsible for development of the HbsAg antigen.

Before proceeding to clinical trials, the team will test polymers that can be used to coat the entire structure and increase the medication's resistance to the human stomach. In animal trials, the formulation proved to be as effective as the injected vaccine, if not more so, in delivering the antigen to the intestine, where the immune system can detect it and produce antibodies against the virus.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), approximately 257 million people currently live with hepatitis B worldwide.

Polyvaccine

Through a project supported by FAPESP, the group led by Sant'Anna, Fantini and Bordalo is now developing new antigens to add to the compound. The idea is to have at least a triple vaccine by adding other antigens against diphtheria and tetanus.

However, the formulation may evolve to become a polyvaccine that also immunizes people against whooping cough, poliomyelitis and Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib), the bacterium that causes meningitis and pneumonia, among other diseases.

The antigens must combat the diseases without interfering with each other. "There have been very interesting results with diphtheria, and we're now going to test it for tetanus, initially in injectable form," Sant'Anna said.

####

About FUNDA��O DE AMPARO � PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE S�O PAULOAbout S�o Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)

The S�o Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) is a public institution with the mission of supporting scientific research in all fields of knowledge by awarding scholarships, fellowships and grants to investigators linked with higher education and research institutions in the State of S�o Paulo, Brazil. FAPESP is aware that the very best research can only be done by working with the best researchers internationally. Therefore, it has established partnerships with funding agencies, higher education, private companies, and research organizations in other countries known for the quality of their research and has been encouraging scientists funded by its grants to further develop their international collaboration. You can learn more about FAPESP at http://www.fapesp.br/en and visit FAPESP news agency at http://www.agencia.fapesp.br/en to keep updated with the latest scientific breakthroughs FAPESP helps achieve through its many programs, awards and research centers. You may also subscribe to FAPESP news agency at http://agencia.fapesp.br/subscribe .

For more information, please click here

Contacts:Joao Carlos Silva

55-113-838-4381

Copyright © FUNDA��O DE AMPARO � PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE S�O PAULO

If you have a comment, please Contact us.

Issuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.

Bookmark: Delicious Digg Newsvine Google Yahoo Reddit Magnoliacom Furl Facebook

Imaging

An artificial intelligence probe help see tumor malignancy July 1st, 2022

News and information

Two opposing approaches could give lithium-sulfur batteries a leg up over lithium-ion July 1st, 2022

Robot nose that can �smell� disease on your breath: Scientists develop diagnostic device for identifying compounds unique to particular diseases July 1st, 2022

Efficiently processing high-quality periodic nanostructures with ultrafast laser July 1st, 2022

Photonic synapses with low power consumption and high sensitivity are expected to integrate sensing-memory-preprocessing capabilities July 1st, 2022

Possible Futures

Technologies boost potential for carbon dioxide conversion to useful products: Researchers explore use metal-organic frameworks based catalysts for hydrogenation of carbon dioxide July 1st, 2022

Sieving carbons: Ideal anodes for high-energy sodium-ion batteries July 1st, 2022

An artificial intelligence probe help see tumor malignancy July 1st, 2022

Photon-controlled diode: an optoelectronic device with a new signal processing behavior July 1st, 2022

Nanomedicine

An artificial intelligence probe help see tumor malignancy July 1st, 2022

Robot nose that can �smell� disease on your breath: Scientists develop diagnostic device for identifying compounds unique to particular diseases July 1st, 2022

From outside to inside: A rapid and precise total assessment method for cells: Researchers at Nara Institute of Science and Technology show that using four frequencies of applied voltage can improve the measurement of cell size and shape during impedance cytometry, enabling to en June 24th, 2022

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Discoveries

Technologies boost potential for carbon dioxide conversion to useful products: Researchers explore use metal-organic frameworks based catalysts for hydrogenation of carbon dioxide July 1st, 2022

Sieving carbons: Ideal anodes for high-energy sodium-ion batteries July 1st, 2022

Efficiently processing high-quality periodic nanostructures with ultrafast laser July 1st, 2022

Photonic synapses with low power consumption and high sensitivity are expected to integrate sensing-memory-preprocessing capabilities July 1st, 2022

Announcements

Two opposing approaches could give lithium-sulfur batteries a leg up over lithium-ion July 1st, 2022

Robot nose that can �smell� disease on your breath: Scientists develop diagnostic device for identifying compounds unique to particular diseases July 1st, 2022

Efficiently processing high-quality periodic nanostructures with ultrafast laser July 1st, 2022

Photonic synapses with low power consumption and high sensitivity are expected to integrate sensing-memory-preprocessing capabilities July 1st, 2022

Interviews/Book Reviews/Essays/Reports/Podcasts/Journals/White papers/Posters

Technologies boost potential for carbon dioxide conversion to useful products: Researchers explore use metal-organic frameworks based catalysts for hydrogenation of carbon dioxide July 1st, 2022

Sieving carbons: Ideal anodes for high-energy sodium-ion batteries July 1st, 2022

An artificial intelligence probe help see tumor malignancy July 1st, 2022

Photon-controlled diode: an optoelectronic device with a new signal processing behavior July 1st, 2022

Tools

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Snapshot measurement of single nanostructure�s circular dichroism March 25th, 2022

Eyebrow-raising: Researchers reveal why nanowires stick to each other February 11th, 2022

JEOL Introduces New Scanning Electron Microscope with �Simple SEM� Automation and Live Elemental and 3D Analysis January 14th, 2022

Nanobiotechnology

Robot nose that can �smell� disease on your breath: Scientists develop diagnostic device for identifying compounds unique to particular diseases July 1st, 2022

From outside to inside: A rapid and precise total assessment method for cells: Researchers at Nara Institute of Science and Technology show that using four frequencies of applied voltage can improve the measurement of cell size and shape during impedance cytometry, enabling to en June 24th, 2022

New technology helps reveal inner workings of human genome June 24th, 2022

Disinfectant mechanism of nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles on SARS-CoV-2: Nano-sized electrostatic atomized water particles destroy SARS-CoV-2 envelope, protein, and RNA, thereby impairing the virus�s ability to bind to host cells June 17th, 2022