DNA origami vaccine nanoparticles improve humoral and cellular immune responses to infectious diseases
- Authors
- Zeng, Yang C.; Young, Olivia J.; Xiong, Qiancheng; Si, Longlong; Ku, Min Wen; Bernier, Sylvie G.; Dembele, Hawa; Isinelli, Giorgia; Gilboa, Tal; Swank, Zoe; Seok, Su Hyun; Rajwar, Anjali; Jiang, Amanda; Zhai, Yunhao; Williams, Latonya D.; Hellman, Caleb A.; Wintersinger, Chris M.; Graveline, Amanda R.; Vernet, Andyna; Sanchez, Melinda; Bardales, Sarai; Tomaras, Georgia D.; Ryu, Ju Hee; Kwon, Ick Chan; Goyal, Girija; Ingber, 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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