Adjuvants in
immunology are often used to modify or augment the effects of a vaccine by stimulating the
immune system to
respond to the vaccine more vigorously, and thus providing increased immunity to a particular
disease. Adjuvants accomplish this task by mimicking specific sets of
evolutionarily conserved molecules, so called
pathogen-associated molecular patterns, which include
liposomes,
lipopolysaccharide, molecular cages for
antigens, components of bacterial
cell walls, and
endocytosed nucleic acids such as
RNA,
double-stranded RNA,
single-stranded DNA, and
unmethylated CpG dinucleotide-containing DNA. Because immune systems have
evolved to recognize these specific
antigenic moieties, the presence of an adjuvant in conjunction with the vaccine can greatly increase the
innate immune response to the antigen by augmenting the activities of
dendritic cells,
lymphocytes, and
macrophages by mimicking a natural
infection.
Types • Inorganic compounds:
potassium alum,
aluminium hydroxide,
aluminium phosphate,
calcium phosphate hydroxide • Oils:
paraffin oil, Adjuvant 65 (based on
peanut oil) was tested in influenza vaccines in the 1970s, but was never released commercially. The oily natural substance
squalene • Bacterial products: killed bacteria of the species
Bordetella pertussis,
Mycobacterium bovis,
toxoids. imidazopyrimidines) • Physical methods: radiofrequency heating (only tested in mice), microneedles (only tested in mice)
Inorganic adjuvants Aluminium salts There are many adjuvants, some of which are
inorganic, that carry the potential to augment
immunogenicity.
Alum was the first aluminium
salt used for this purpose, but has been almost completely replaced by
aluminium hydroxide and
aluminium phosphate for commercial vaccines. Aluminium salts are the most commonly used adjuvants in human vaccines. Their adjuvant activity was described in 1926. However, studies have shown that surgical removal of these depots had no impact on the magnitude of
IgG1 response. Alum can trigger
dendritic cells and other immune cells to secrete
Interleukin 1 beta (IL1β), an immune signal that promotes antibody production. Alum adheres to the cell's plasma membrane and rearranges certain lipids there. Spurred into action, the dendritic cells pick up the antigen and speed to lymph nodes, where they stick tightly to a
helper T cell and presumably induce an immune response. A second mechanism depends on alum killing immune cells at the injection site although researchers aren't sure exactly how alum kills these cells. It has been speculated that the dying cells release DNA which serves as an immune alarm. Some studies found that DNA from dying cells causes them to adhere more tightly to helper T cells which ultimately leads to an increased release of antibodies by
B cells. No matter what the mechanism is, alum is not a perfect adjuvant because it does not work with all antigens (e.g. malaria and tuberculosis). However, recent research indicates that alum formulated in a
nanoparticle form rather than microparticles can broaden the utility of alum adjuvants and promote stronger adjuvant effects.
Organic adjuvants Freund's complete adjuvant is a solution of inactivated
Mycobacterium tuberculosis in mineral oil developed in 1930. It is not safe enough for human use. A version without the bacteria, that is only oil in water, is known as Freund's incomplete adjuvant. It helps vaccines release antigens for a longer time. Despite the side effects, its potential benefit has led to a few clinical trials.
Squalene is a naturally occurring organic compound used in human and animal vaccines. Squalene is an oil, made up of carbon and hydrogen atoms, produced by plants and is present in many foods. Squalene is also produced by the human liver as a precursor to
cholesterol and is present in human
sebum.
MF59 is an oil-in-water emulsion of squalene adjuvant used in some human vaccines. As of 2021, over 22 million doses of one vaccine with squalene, FLUAD, have been administered with no severe adverse effects reported.
AS03 is another squalene-containing adjuvant. In addition, squalene-based O/W emulsions have also been shown to stably incorporate small molecule TLR7/8 adjuvants (e.g. PVP-037) and lead to enhanced adjuvanticity via synergism. Monophosphoryl
lipid A (MPL), a detoxified version of the
lipopolysaccharide toxin from the bacterium
Salmonella Minnesota, interacts with the receptor
TLR4 to enhance immune response. The combination of QS-21, cholesterol and MPL forms the adjuvant AS01 which is used in the
Shingrix vaccine approved in 2017, as well as in the approved
malaria vaccine Mosquirix. The adjuvant
Matrix-M is an
immune stimulating complex (ISCOM) consisting of nanospheres made of QS-21,
cholesterol and
phospholipids. It is used in the approved
Novavax Covid-19 vaccine and in the
malaria vaccine R21/Matrix-M. Several unmethylated
cytosine phosphoguanosine (CpG)
oligonucleotides activate the
TLR9 receptor that is present in a number of cell types of the immune system. The adjuvant CpG 1018 is used in an approved
Hepatitis B vaccine. ==Adaptive immune response==