DNA origami vaccine nanoparticles improve humoral and cellular immune responses to infectious diseases

Authors
Zeng, Yang C.Young, Olivia J.Xiong, QianchengSi, LonglongKu, Min WenBernier, Sylvie G.Dembele, HawaIsinelli, GiorgiaGilboa, TalSwank, ZoeSeok, Su HyunRajwar, AnjaliJiang, AmandaZhai, YunhaoWilliams, Latonya D.Hellman, Caleb A.Wintersinger, Chris M.Graveline, Amanda R.Vernet, AndynaSanchez, MelindaBardales, SaraiTomaras, Georgia D.Ryu, Ju HeeKwon, Ick ChanGoyal, GirijaIngber, Donald E.Shih, William M.
Issue Date
2026-03
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
Nature Biomedical Engineering
Abstract
Current SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) vaccines have shown robust induction of neutralizing antibodies and CD4+ T cell activation; however, CD8+ responses are variable, and the duration of immunity and protection against variants are limited. Here we repurpose our DNA origami vaccine nanotechnology DoriVac to target infectious viruses, namely, SARS-CoV-2, HIV and Ebola. The DNA origami nanoparticle, conjugated with infectious-disease-specific heptad repeat 2 peptides, which act as highly conserved antigens, and CpG adjuvant at precise nanoscale spacing, induces neutralizing antibodies, Th1 CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells in naive mice, with significant improvement over a bolus control. Pre-clinical studies using lymph-node-on-a-chip systems validate that DoriVac, when conjugated with antigenic peptides or proteins, induces promising cellular and humoral immune responses in human cells. Moreover, DoriVac bearing full-length SARS-CoV-2 spike protein achieves immune responses comparable to current mRNA vaccine platforms while potentially reducing storage constraints. These results suggest that DoriVac holds potential as a versatile, modular vaccine platform, capable of inducing both humoral and cellular immunities, underscoring its potential future use.
Keywords
PROTEIN; CELLS; CORE STRUCTURE; EBOLA-VIRUS
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/154487
DOI
10.1038/s41551-026-01614-w
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2026
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