Abstract
DNA vaccines have many potential benefits but have failed to generate robust immune responses in humans. Recently, methods such as in vivo electroporation have demonstrated improved performance, but an optimal strategy for safe, reproducible, and pain-free DNA vaccination remains elusive. Here we report an approach for rapid implantation of vaccine-loaded polymer films carrying DNA, immune-stimulatory RNA, and biodegradable polycations into the immune-cell-rich epidermis, using microneedles coated with releasable polyelectrolyte multilayers. Films transferred into the skin following brief microneedle application promoted local transfection and controlled the persistence of DNA and adjuvants in the skin from days to weeks, with kinetics determined by the film composition. These ‘multilayer tattoo’ DNA vaccines induced immune responses against a model HIV antigen comparable to electroporation in mice, enhanced memory T-cell generation, and elicited 140-fold higher gene expression in non-human primate skin than intradermal DNA injection, indicating the potential of this strategy for enhancing DNA vaccination.
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Main
DNA vaccines have been intensively studied because of potential advantages such as ease of good manufacturing practice production, lack of anti-vector immunity, and the capability to promote both cellular and humoral immune responses1,2. However, plasmid DNA (pDNA) immunization has shown poor efficacy in non-human primates and human trials1,3, and the most promising methods for increasing the potency of these vaccines have employed complicated methods such as in vivo electroporation that are not attractive for widespread prophylactic vaccination4. Parallel to the technical challenges of DNA vaccination, traditional needle-based administration of vaccines has a number of disadvantages: liquid vaccine formulations typically require refrigeration, which raises the cost and complexity of global distribution (the ‘cold chain’)5, administration requires trained personnel, and safety is hampered by needle re-use and needle-based injuries6. These issues become particularly acute for vaccine distribution in the developing world6,7,8.
We hypothesized that DNA vaccine delivery would be substantially enhanced by an approach that could simultaneously target DNA to tissues rich in immune-response-governing dendritic cells, promote sustained transfection without toxicity, and provide supporting inflammatory cues to enhance the induction of a potent immune response. Moreover, vaccines have been shown to vary widely in potency, depending on the kinetics of both antigen and adjuvant exposure, with optimal immunity often stimulated by the persistence of antigen and inflammatory signals for up to one week9,10,11,12. To meet these design goals, we developed a strategy using microneedles to rapidly implant into the skin biodegradable polymer films, which continuously release DNA polyplexes and adjuvant molecules in this immunologically competent tissue over a tunable and sustained period of time. We show that skin-implanted vaccine multilayers allow control over the physical and functional persistence of inflammatory adjuvants and pDNA, efficiently transfecting cells in murine skin and eliciting cellular and humoral immune responses comparable to or exceeding in vivo electroporation of pDNA, one of the most promising current technologies for DNA vaccine delivery4. We have termed this approach of implanting persistent polymer films into the skin ‘multilayer tattooing’, by analogy to conventional tattooing, where persisting inks are deposited in the skin. These multilayer vaccine formulations allow for dry-state storage of coated microneedle patches at room temperature for weeks without loss of activity, an important advantage for decreasing costs and improving vaccine availability in remote areas. Further, when applied to viable macaque skin ex vivo, multilayer tattooing elicited 140-fold greater gene expression compared to naked DNA injection. Thus, this polymer film tattooing approach may offer a route to efficacious DNA vaccines via a pain-free and self-administrable dry skin-patch platform.
We first set out to create implantable vaccine coatings using polyelectrolyte multilayers13,14 (PEMs, Fig. 1a), nanostructured films formed by iterative adsorption of alternately charged polymers, which embed large weight-fractions of biologic cargos (for example, DNA, up to 40% of total film mass)15, stabilize embedded molecules in the dried state16,17, and exhibit release kinetics predetermined by the film architecture/composition. We hypothesized that rapid multilayer transfer from coated microneedles into the epidermis could be achieved via an underlying polymer film designed to instantly dissolve when microneedles are applied to the skin (Fig. 1b), allowing the kinetics of DNA/adjuvant release in the tissue to be tailored separately from the time required for a microneedle patch to be kept on the skin. To create such releasable vaccine coatings, we employed a photo-sensitive and pH-responsive polymer, poly(o-nitrobenzyl -methacrylate-co-methyl-methacrylate-co-poly(ethylene-glycol)-methacrylate) (PNMP), for the release-layer. PNMP is initially organic-soluble, but on brief exposure to ultraviolet, cleavage of the o-nitrobenzyl groups converts the polymer to a weak polyelectrolyte (uv-PNMP) soluble in water above pH ~ 6.5 (ref. 18). As shown below, this photo-switchable solubility provided the means to prove that PEM film implantation depended on PNMP release-layer dissolution.
Skin patches were fabricated by melt-moulding poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) on poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) moulds to obtain arrays of microneedles, each 250 μm in diameter at their base and 650 μm in height (Supplementary Fig. S1)19. Biotinylated-PNMP (bPNMP, Supplementary Fig. S2a) films were coated on microneedles by spray deposition20 from 1,4-dioxane solutions, exposed to ultraviolet to trigger the photochemical transition in the film, and then stained with fluorescent streptavidin (SAv) to permit visualization of the release-layer by microscopy. Next, LbL deposition was used to construct an overlying PEM film composed of Cy5-labelled pDNA encoding luciferase (Cy5-pLUC) and the transfection agent poly-1, a biodegradable poly(β-amino-ester) (PBAE, Supplementary Fig. S2b)19,21. PEM films were initiated by depositing 20 bilayers of protamine-sulphate (PS) and poly(4-styrene-sulphonate) (SPS) to provide a uniform charge density, followed by iterative adsorption of poly-1 and Cy5-pLUC (Fig. 2a). Profilometry measurements performed on PEMs constructed in parallel on Si substrates showed linear multilayer growth with increasing deposition cycles, as previously reported for (PBAE/pDNA) films (Fig. 2b)19,21. Confocal imaging of microneedles coated with composite (uv-bPNMP)(PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/Cy5-pLUC) 35 PEM films showed conformal co-localized fluorescence from SAv-labelled uv-bPNMP and Cy5-pLUC over the surface of each PLLA microneedle (Fig. 2c). (Individual uv-bPNMP and PEM films were too thin to resolve as distinct layers.) When analysed at sequential stages of PEM film deposition, the mean total SAv-bPNMP fluorescence signal from single microneedles was stable, but Cy5-pLUC fluorescence linearly increased with increasing rounds of bilayer deposition, confirming linear film growth on microneedles (Fig. 2d). Measurement of DNA recovered from microneedle coatings disrupted by treatment with sodium chloride showed ~4.2 μg DNA deposited per bilayer per cm2 of the microneedle array (Fig. 2d). Sequential assembly of PEM films comprising layers of (poly-1/poly(I:C)) followed by layers of (poly-1/pLUC) generated microneedles coated with complete vaccine multilayers containing pDNA, a transfection agent, and a strong adjuvant (Fig. 2e). These composite films showed conformal coating of both vaccine components (Fig. 2f) and linear growth of pLUC layers over poly(I:C) layers with increasing number of deposition cycles (Fig. 2g,h). Key to this process is that the DNA-containing PEM is never exposed to ultraviolet irradiation, thus avoiding any potential damage due to ultraviolet exposure.
Lack of toxicity/biocompatibility is critical for materials used in prophylactic vaccines, and the components of the microneedle system were chosen with biocompatibility in mind: polylactide, used as the microneedle base, is a bioresorbable polymer with a long history of clinical use in resorbable sutures and drug delivery devices. Although we chose to use (PS/SPS) ‘base-layer’ films for convenience in lab-scale studies, simplified film architectures composed of only PNMP and (PBAE/nucleic acids) could be deposited with linear growth per deposition cycle for 20 or more bilayers (data not shown). Previous studies have demonstrated the biocompatibility of both PNMP in vitro18,22 and poly-1 and poly-2 polymers in vitro and in vivo23,24,25. Consistent with these data, we observed no apparent local toxicity in any of the mice treated throughout these studies.
To test PEM film release from microneedle arrays, dried composite (SAv-labelled uv-bPNMP)(PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/Cy5-pLUC) 35 coatings (referred to henceforth as PNMP/PEM films) on microneedles were immersed in pH 7.4 PBS for varying times in vitro and imaged by confocal microscopy to quantitate uv-bPNMP and Cy5-pLUC fluorescence remaining on the microneedle surfaces. After 15 min incubation in PBS, we observed a significant loss of both bPNMP and Cy5-pLUC fluorescence from microneedle arrays (Supplementary Fig. S3). By contrast, no film release was observed if PEMs were assembled onto PNMP coatings that had not been irradiated to photo-switch the release-layer’s solubility. To determine whether microneedles coated with releasable films would permit rapid multilayer implantation in vivo, we applied dry (PNMP/PEM)-coated microneedles to the auricular skin of C57Bl/6-MHC II-GFP mice26. Trypan blue staining of treated skin in this case showed consistent microneedle insertion (Fig. 3a). Mirroring our in vitro observations, confocal imaging of microneedles after 15 min application to murine skin showed that both uv-bPNMP and Cy5-pLUC fluorescence was rapidly lost from coated microneedles, but only if PNMP films were irradiated before multilayer assembly to prime for rapid dissolution of the release-layer (Fig. 3b,c). Confocal imaging of skin samples following application of (PNMP/PEM)-coated microneedles for 15 min showed significant transfer of Cy5-pLUC in the epidermis co-localized with MHC II-GFP+ Langerhans cells (LCs; Fig. 3d) and up to 400 μm deep into the skin (Fig. 3e), but only when the PNMP layer was ultraviolet-primed. Similarly, microneedles carrying poly(I:C)-loaded PEM films deposited fluorescently labelled poly(I:C) into the skin, colocalizing in the same z-plane with MHC II-GFP-expressing cell populations (Fig. 3f). Twenty-four hours after implantation of (poly-1/nucleic acid) multilayers, the degrading films were observed dispersed into the tissue around the needle insertion site and showed apparent uptake in colocalized LCs (Fig. 3g). Thus, the uv-PNMP release-layer promotes rapid transfer of DNA- or RNA-loaded films from microneedles into the skin.
We next tested whether the in vivo kinetics of nucleic acid release into the surrounding tissue could be controlled via the composition of multilayers implanted in the skin. Past studies have demonstrated the ability of multilayers composed of pDNA assembled with the PBAEs poly-1 or poly-2 to mediate release with varying kinetics27,28. Consistent with this previous work, (PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/poly(I:C)) 35 and (PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/pLUC) 35 multilayers constructed on Si substrates exhibited rapid release at 37 °C of ~ 80% pLUC or poly(I:C) within 24 h, whereas analogous films constructed with poly-2 showed a slower release lasting ~ 1 week (Supplementary Fig. S4). To determine whether the composition of PBAE multilayers implanted via microneedle delivery could mediate similar tunable release of nucleic acid therapeutics in vivo, we constructed (PBAE/Cy5-poly(I:C)) PEM films on uv-PNMP-coated microneedles using poly-1 or poly-2 as the PBAE component. Following application of coated microneedles to the skin of C57Bl/6 mice for 15 min, we monitored the fluorescence signal of implanted Cy5-poly(I:C) over time using whole-animal fluorescence imaging. Similar to the in vitro trend, films encapsulating poly(I:C) with poly-1 were quickly cleared from the application site, whereas (poly-2/poly(I:C)) films persisted for ten days following application (Fig. 4a). To quantify the functional impact of sustained polyI:C adjuvant release in vivo, we applied microneedles carrying (poly-2/poly(I:C)) multilayers to the auricular skin of mice or injected equivalent doses of free poly(I:C) intradermally at the same site, and administered the chemiluminescent probe luminol to trace local inflammation over time. Systemically injected luminol emits photons when catabolized by myeloperoxidase (MPO) produced by activated innate immune cells at sites of inflammation29,30. As shown in Fig. 4b, bolus poly(I:C) injection elicited a transient burst of inflammation that resolved by 48 h, whereas multilayer implantation resulted in 2-fold higher peak MPO activity at 24 h that decayed slowly to baseline over ~ 1 week. Importantly, poly(I:C)-triggered inflammation was highly localized to the application site, as no elevation of systemic cytokines was observed following multilayer implantation (data not shown). Thus, the composition of implanted PEM films can directly control the kinetics of release and local inflammatory response in the skin.
The selection of poly-1 and poly-2 as biodegradable polycation components of these PEM coatings was motivated not only by their ability to regulate nucleic acid release, but also to directly promote transfection by forming pDNA polyplexes in situ during film degradation21,31. Dynamic light scattering analysis of supernatants collected from these eroded films in vitro revealed large aggregates (50–300 nm, data not shown), consistent with previous evidence of in situ polyplex formation/release from degrading (PBAE/pDNA) multilayers27,31. To determine whether controlled polyplex release from implanted films would allow gene expression kinetics to be regulated in vivo, we used bioluminescence imaging to monitor expression of luciferase-encoding DNA longitudinally in live animals. Although in vivo optical imaging analysis of bioluminescent signals is limited by variable photon penetration from different tissue depths and locations, it is useful for accurate comparison of relative signals from identical tissue sites and for longitudinal analysis of the duration of expression. Microneedles were prepared with (PNMP/PEM) coatings containing pLUC as before, with or without ultraviolet-priming of the PNMP release-layer. We verified that pDNA released from multilayers in vitro retained bioactivity over the entire course of film degradation comparable to fresh PBAE/DNA polyplexes (Supplementary Fig. S5). In vivo, control microneedles (where the release-layer was not ultraviolet-primed) applied to the skin of mice for 15 min led to no detectable expression of pLUC by bioluminescence imaging (Supplementary Fig. S6), consistent with the lack of detectable film transfer into skin under this condition. By contrast, mice treated with microneedles coated with (uv-PNMP/PEM) films showed significant levels of bioluminescence one day after application, demonstrating transfection of cells in situ (Fig. 4c). Further, the kinetics of pLUC expression varied greatly depending on the PBAE used: delivery of (poly-1/pLUC) multilayers led to luciferase expression that peaked after three days and declined to background levels after ten days, whereas implantation of slower-degrading (poly-2/pLUC) films showed prolonged bioluminescence, peaking on day 3 then slowly decreasing to background levels by day 22 (Fig. 4c). Together this data shows that multilayer tattooing can be used to tailor the duration of both inflammatory signals and antigen-encoding DNA expression in vivo, via selection of constituent polymers with varying degradation rates.
Embedding bioactive molecules in multilayer films has previously been shown to enhance their stability for dry-state storage at room temperature16,17, an attractive feature for vaccines given the costs and availability limitations imposed by the need for refrigeration of liquid vaccine formulations. To test whether (PBAE/pDNA) multilayer films coated on microneedles stabilize their DNA cargo for dry storage, we fabricated microneedle arrays coated with (uv-PNMP/PEM) films and stored them dry at 25 °C for 0, 14 or 28 days before application to the skin of mice as before. Bioluminescence imaging of these animals after treatment revealed no significant decrease in transfection resulting from storage, indicating the maintenance of pDNA bioactivity in multilayers for extended durations (Fig. 4d). These results suggest that microneedles coated with vaccine-containing multilayers could be easily packaged for inexpensive dry-state storage and transportation to remote areas of the world, bypassing the ‘cold-chain’ requirements of conventional vaccines.
Previous work has demonstrated DNA uptake in both keratinocytes and local APCs following delivery to the skin in both humans and mice, both of which can contribute to induction of immune responses in DNA vaccination (reviewed in ref. 32). To test the ability of multilayer tattooing with vaccine-loaded polymer films to enhance DNA immunization, we coated microneedles with (uv-PNMP)(PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/poly(I:C)) 35(poly-1/pGag) 35 composite releasable multilayers containing the adjuvant poly(I:C) and pGag, a plasmid encoding the model HIV antigen SIV-gag (Fig. 5a). We compared multilayer tattooing to several control immunizations using the same delivered dose of pGag and poly(I:C): injection of ‘naked’ pDNA, the most common experimental strategy for DNA immunization in mice and humans; and in vivo electroporation, where DNA is administered in the presence of an electric field to promote DNA uptake4,33. To confirm the importance of the pH-responsive release-layer, we also tested microneedles where the PNMP layer was not ultraviolet-treated, and hence unable to dissolve on skin insertion. Finally, we also compared immune responses in mice receiving intradermal injections of poly-1/pGag polyplexes, to determine the importance of the sustained-release multilayer film architecture for generating immunity. In all cases we immunized groups of animals on days 0 and 28 with 20 μg pGag and 10 μg poly(I:C). Multilayer tattooing was performed with microneedles (MN±UV) applied to the dorsal ear skin for 15 min. Control mice were injected intradermally (ID and ID Polyplex) in the ear skin, or intramuscularly with or without in vivo electroporation (IM±EP). Peptide-MHC tetramer staining of peripheral blood mononuclear cells showed that IM and ID±Polyplex administration produced only weak antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses (Fig. 5b–d). By contrast, microneedle-treated groups showed robust expansion of Gag-reactive T-cells, exceeding 5% of the circulating CD8+ population two weeks after the boost, a response that was quantitatively similar to frequencies observed for IM+EP immunized mice (Fig. 5b–d). Notably, the response to MN vaccination was ablated if the PNMP release-layer was not ultraviolet-treated (and was therefore unable to dissolve on application). Moreover, compared to all of the other vaccination regimens, microneedle administration generated substantially greater frequencies of CD44+CD62L+ central memory T-cells, a population thought to be important for recall immunity and long-term protection (Fig. 5e,f)34. Following injection of naked pDNA 3.5 months after the prime to test recall responses, large frequencies of IFN- γ-producing CD8+ T-cells were elicited (Fig. 5g), suggesting the establishment of robust T-cell memory. Finally, two weeks after the boost, we measured total Gag-specific IgG titers in sera and observed a 10-fold increase in microneedle-treated mice over those given any other immunization regimen (P < 0.01; Fig. 5h). Thus, DNA vaccination via multilayer tattooing shows the potential to match (or exceed) the potency of in vivo electroporation, using a skin patch that can be stored in a dry state, is painlessly applied with no extraneous apparatus, and could be self-applied in minutes.
Although naked DNA injections stimulate immune responses in small animals, responses observed in non-human primates and humans have been much weaker1,2,3. To determine whether multilayer tattooing could also enhance the efficacy of DNA delivery in non-human primates, we tested the ability of PNMP-coated microneedles to deliver (poly-1/pLUC) multilayers into fresh explanted skin from Rhesus macaques ex vivo. Trypan blue staining and histological sectioning of macaque skin treated with uncoated PLLA microneedles showed uniform patterns of microneedle insertion into the superficial layers of the skin without disruption of underlying dermal layers or capillary vessels (Fig. 6a,b). We tested the ability of microneedles coated with (uv-PNMP/PEM) films to transfect ex vivo cultured macaque skin explants compared to intradermal injections of equivalent doses of naked pDNA. Microneedles coated with (PNMP/PEM) multilayers effectively transfected macaque skin explants following a 15 min application period, but, as in mice, transfection only occurred if the PNMP release-layer was ultraviolet-primed for dissolution (Fig. 6c). Bioluminescence imaging of the treated skin samples showed that microneedle delivery generated consistent expression of luciferase at 140-fold greater levels compared to intradermally injected naked DNA controls for several days (P < 0.01, Fig. 6d). Previous results in mice have indicated that the magnitude of gene expression following DNA vaccination correlates with the strength of T-cell responses in vivo 35. Thus, although the limitations of ex vivo skin explant culture prevent measurement of the long-term duration of gene expression, these results indicate that microneedle delivery promotes strong initial DNA expression in non-human primate skin, where naked DNA injection elicits very weak transfection only a few fold above background. Although the magnitude of gene expression is only one parameter determining the ultimate strength of immune responses following DNA vaccination, the ability to improve expression levels in primates is a significant result, given that poor transfection efficiency is an acknowledged obstacle for improving DNA immunogenicity in large animal models and humans33,36.
Microneedles have recently shown substantial promise in vaccine delivery37,38, and several reports have begun to explore the use of metal microneedles to deliver DNA into the skin39,40,41,42. These studies have demonstrated the ability of naked DNA delivery by microneedles to provide enhanced immune responses compared to intramuscular injection, but only one study compared microneedle administration to alternative approaches designed to elicit improved transfection; in that test microneedles elicited T-cell responses comparable to gene gun delivery of DNA if twice the DNA dose was given by the microneedle array40. Here we have demonstrated a new approach for DNA vaccination via multilayer ‘tattooing’, using microneedles employing a pH-responsive release-layer to rapidly implant biodegradable vaccine-loaded polymer films into the skin. (Note that this new approach should not be confused with earlier studies of ‘DNA tattooing’, where DNA solutions are literally applied to the skin using a commercial tattoo device9,33,43—a completely different method.) Multilayer tattooing simultaneously addresses several issues in DNA vaccine delivery: implanted multilayers deliver DNA with transfection agents, promoting transfection in situ; molecular adjuvants are co-delivered to amplify the immune response; and we have shown that the multilayer structure allows the kinetics of vaccine release to be tailored over days to weeks. Combined, these features enabled multilayer tattooing to elicit immune responses in mice far exceeding naked DNA injections. These responses were also comparable to in vivo electroporation, an approach currently viewed as a gold standard for experimental DNA vaccine potency but which requires special equipment, elicits pain and discomfort in recipients44,45, and is unlikely to be feasible in widespread prophylactic vaccination. Notably, vaccines have been shown to vary widely in potency based on the duration of exposure to antigen and adjuvant combinations9,10,11,12. Our studies suggest that the continuous release of polyplexes from implanted multilayers may be critical to the enhanced immunogenicity of multilayer tattooing, as bolus injection of free polyplexes formed from the same components elicited very weak immune responses. Finally, we have shown that formulation of DNA vaccines as multilayer coatings on microneedles provides the opportunity for long-term maintenance of DNA bioactivity in a dried state without refrigeration, addressing cost and availability limitations imposed by the cold-chain in the global distribution and storage of vaccines. We focused here on DNA vaccination owing to the relevance of needle-free vaccines for global health and the need for enhanced DNA vaccination strategies. However, the well-known adaptability of multilayers for incorporation and controlled release of diverse therapeutics15,46,47,48,49,50,51 suggests this approach should be applicable to diverse drug delivery applications. Further, the pH-sensitive release-layer strategy employed here is a generalizable approach to create selectively released multilayer films. Although the true potential of any vaccination strategy can only be established in human clinical trials, the data shown here suggest that multilayer tattooing is a promising approach to enhance the efficacy of DNA vaccines, a platform technology with the potential to be applied universally in vaccine development.
Methods
Materials.
bPNMP (31:59:10 oNBMA:MMA:PEGMA by mol, 17 kDa), poly-1 (15 kDa), and poly-2 (20 kDa) were synthesized as previously reported18,24. AL-11/H-2K b-peptide-MHC II tetramers were provided by the NIH tetramer core facility.
PLLA microneedle fabrication.
PDMS moulds (Sylgard 184, Dow-Corning) were prepared using a Clark-MXR-CPA-2010 (VaxDesign). PLLA (IV 1.9 dl g−1, Lakeshore Biomaterials) was melted over the moulds under vacuum (−25 in. Hg, 200 °C, 40 min), and then cooled to −20 °C before removal and crystallization at 140 °C for 4 h for solvent resistance.
PNMP release-layer deposition.
On Si substrates, 3 wt% PNMP in 1,4-dioxane was deposited using a Specialty Coating Systems P6700 (Indianapolis). On PLLA microneedles, 0.25 wt% bPNMP was spray deposited as previously described (0.2 ml s−1, 15 cm range, 10 s; ref. 20). Films were dried under vacuum at 25 °C for 12 h. bPNMP release-layers were labelled with Alexafluor-488-conjugated-SAv (10 μg ml−1 in PBS pH 6.0, Sigma-Aldrich).
Polymer multilayer film preparation.
LbL films were assembled using a Carl Ziess HMS-DS50 stainer. Films were constructed on Si wafers and PLLA microneedles following deposition of bPNMP and photoswitching via ultraviolet irradiation (254 nm, 2.25 mW cm−2) for 15 min. (PS/SPS) base layers were deposited through alternative immersion into PS (2 mg ml−1, Sigma-Aldrich) and SPS (5 mM, Sigma-Aldrich) for 10 min, separated by two 1 min PBS rinses. (PBAE/nucleic acid) multilayers were deposited similarly, alternating 5 min dips in poly-1/2 (2 mg ml−1) and either pLUC, pGag, or poly(I:C) (Invivogen) solutions (1 mg ml−1) separated by two 30 s PBS rinses. Fluorescent pLUC and poly(I:C) were prepared using Cy5 and tetramethyl-rhodamine (TMR) Label-IT reagent (Mirus Bio). All solutions were in PBS, adjusted to pH 5.0. Films were characterized using a Veeco Dektak profilometer and a Zeiss LSM510. Normalized integrated signal intensities (Norm. int. signal int.) were determined by integrating the total confocal fluorescence signal from z-stacks collected through the length of individual microneedles following various treatments and normalizing to the total initial fluorescence on the as-fabricated microneedles. Data analysis was performed using Image J. Film loading was determined using a SpectraMax 250 following elution of films in PBS, pH 7.4, 2M NaCl for 24 h.
In vitro/in vivo delivery.
For in vitro release experiments, (PS/SPS) 20(PBAE/nucleic acid) 35 films were incubated in PBS at 37 °C and aliquots were assayed for pLUC or poly(I:C) using picogreen or ribogreen assay kits (Invitrogen). For in vitro delivery, coated microneedles were incubated in PBS, pH 7.4 and imaged by confocal microscopy. In vivo delivery experiments were performed on anesthetized C57BL/6 mice (Jackson Laboratories) and MHC II-GFP transgenic mice (a gift from H. Ploegh)26. Ears were rinsed with PBS on the dorsal side and dried before application of microneedle arrays by gentle pressure. Applied microneedles were imaged by confocal microscopy. Treated skin was excised and stained with trypan blue for needle penetration. Ears treated with Cy5-pLUC- or TMR-poly(I:C)-coated microneedles (with or without ultraviolet treatment) were mounted and imaged by confocal microscopy. Clearance of fluorescent poly(I:C) and transfection in mice treated with pLUC-coated arrays (with or without ultraviolet treatment) was measured using an IVIS Spectrum 200 (Caliper Lifesciences). For luminescent measurements of pLUC expression, mice were imaged following IP administration of D-luciferin (150 mg kg−1). For luminescent imaging of MPO-dependent oxidative burst, luminol sodium salt (Santa Cruz Biotech) was administered IP (250 mg kg−1) before imaging as previously described29. Fluorescence/bioluminescence data was processed using region of interest (ROI) analysis with background subtraction and internal control ROI comparison to untreated skin using the Living Image 4.0 software package (Caliper).
Vaccinations.
Animal studies were approved by the MIT IUCAC and animals were cared for in the USDA-inspected MIT Animal Facility under federal, state, local, and NIH guidelines for animal care. Groups of 4 C57Bl/6 mice were immunized with 20 μg pGag and 10 μg poly(I:C) by intramuscular injection (15 μl, quadriceps) with or without in vivo electroporation (Harvard Apparatus ECM830, 2 × 60 ms pulses, 200 V cm−1), intradermal injection (15 μl, dorsal ear skin, poly(I:C) mixed with free DNA or DNA/poly-1 polyplexes), or by microneedle array (15 min application of (PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/poly(I:C)) 35(poly-1/pGag) 35 on uv-PNMP and native-PNMP coated PLLA arrays). To form poly-1/pDNA polyplexes, pDNA was mixed as previously described with PBAE (1:1 ratio by mass) in deionized water and vortexed briefly before injection52. All animals received the same delivered doses of pGag and poly(I:C); microneedle-delivered dosages were determined by comparison of total eluted pDNA from coated arrays before and after treatment. Frequencies of Gag-specific CD8+ T-cells and their phenotypes were determined by flow cytometry analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells following staining with DAPI (live/dead), anti-CD8α, anti-CD44, anti-CD62L, and AL-11/H-2 Kb-peptide-MHC tetramers. Anti-Gag IgG titers, defined as the dilution of sera at which the OD reading was 0.25, were determined by ELISA using SIV-mac251 (My Biosource) coated plates, and ultraviolet–visible detection of peroxidase conversion of tetramethybenzydine (KPL) using HRP-conjugated anti-IgG (Jackson Immunoresearch). To assess recall responses, microneedle-treated animals were challenged with 50 μg intramuscular pGag in the quadriceps and cytokine expression was measured by flow cytometry in peripheral blood mononuclear cells following stimulation with AL11 peptide, treatment with brefeldin A, and staining with DAPI, anti-CD8α, and anti-IFNγ, anti-TNFα.
Ex vivo macaque skin culture and microneedle testing.
Macaque studies were approved by the Harvard Medical School IACUC. Outbred Rhesus monkeys were housed at New England Primate Research Center. Fresh skin was obtained from the quadriceps of euthanized Rhesus macaques. Skin was mounted on slides and microneedles were applied by gentle pressure. Skin was stained using trypan blue for needle insertion, formaldehyde fixed, and embedded in paraffin for histological sectioning, hemotoxylin and eosin staining, and optical imaging. To assay ex vivo transfection, pLUC was injected intradermally (20 μg in 10 μl PBS) or delivered by microneedle in (PS/SPS) 20(poly-1/pLUC) 35 multilayers overlying native or uv-PNMP. Skin was cultured as previously described53 and imaged using an IVIS Spectrum after addition of 300 μg luciferin to the culture media. Data analysis was performed as before, using the Living Image Software package.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analysis was performed with Graphpad Prism using two-way analysis of variance or t-test. Values are reported as mean±s.e.m.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported in part by the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard, the NIH (AI095109), and the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnology (Dept. of Defense contracts W911NF-07-D-0004 and W911NF-07-0004, T.O. 8). We thank R. Parkhill and M. Nguyen (VaxDesign) for assistance with microneedle array fabrication. D.J.I. is an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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P.C.D., P.T.H. and D.J.I. designed the experiments. P.C.D., D.H.B. and D.J.I. designed macaque skin studies. P.C.D. carried out the experiments; Y.M. performed in vitro nucleic acid release studies. B.H. synthesized the PNMP polymers. A.D.M. and J.A.K. collected the macaque skin. P.C.D., P.T.H. and D.J.I. analysed the data and wrote the paper.
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DeMuth, P., Min, Y., Huang, B. et al. Polymer multilayer tattooing for enhanced DNA vaccination. Nature Mater 12, 367–376 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat3550
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat3550
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