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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, September 2006, p. 1010-1013, Vol. 13, No. 9
1071-412X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00191-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Novartis Vaccines, 53100 Siena, Italy,1 Novartis Vaccines, Emeryville, California 94608-29162
Received 26 May 2006/ Returned for modification 5 July 2006/ Accepted 14 July 2006
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Since it is a natural component of the human body and is biodegradable, squalene has been used as a component of vaccine adjuvants. One of these adjuvants is MF59, an oil-in-water emulsion developed by Chiron (14). MF59 has been shown in various preclinical and clinical studies to significantly enhance the immune response to a wide variety of vaccine antigens (15). MF59 is a part of an influenza subunit vaccine which has been licensed in various European countries since 1997. More than 20 million doses of this vaccine have been given, and it has been shown to have an excellent safety profile. The safety of vaccines with the MF59 adjuvant has also been shown by various investigational clinical studies using recombinant antigens from hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus, human immunodeficiency virus, uropathogenic Escherichia coli, etc., with various age groups, including 1- to 3-day-old newborns (16).
In 2000, antisqualene antibodies were reported to be present in the sera of veterans returning from the first Persian Gulf War with a series of symptoms diagnosed by the authors of the report as representing the so-called Gulf War syndrome (4). The conclusions of this work, based on Western blot assays, were severely criticized on technical grounds (1) and were considered inconclusive by the Institute of Medicine (7).
Despite the fact that vaccines given to veterans returning with Gulf War syndrome did not contain squalene (6) and despite that fact that symptoms similar to those of the so-called Gulf War syndrome have been reported after several wars, including the American Civil War (9), we decided to undertake a study to determine whether immunization with the influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant stimulated antibody responses against squalene. To this end, we set up and validated an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), originally developed by Matyas et al. (11), and tested serum samples from adults never immunized with vaccines with the MF59 adjuvant and serum samples from individuals vaccinated with the influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant. We conclude that antisqualene antibodies are found very frequently at low titers in sera from healthy, unvaccinated adults and that vaccination with influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant does not result in any measurable impact on these antibody titers.
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Quantitation of IgM and IgG antibodies against squalene.
Assays for quantitation of serum antisqualene immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgM antibodies were carried out according to a method described by Matyas et al. (11), with minor modifications. Briefly, for the detection of IgG antibodies, 96-well microtiter plates were coated with 10 µM of squalene (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) dissolved in isopropanol. As a control, some wells were left uncoated (i.e., treated with isopropanol alone). After blocking of the uncoated sites with phosphate-buffered saline containing casein (0.5%, wt/vol) and 0.002% chlorhexidine, test samples and assay controls were assayed starting from a dilution of 1:10 followed by various twofold dilutions. IgG antibodies were detected by a horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human IgG Fc fragment-specific antibody. A best-fit curve of dilution versus optical density was generated for each dilution series by using a four-parameter curve fitting routine to determine an endpoint dilution titer. IgG values of
20 were considered positive. Specificity was determined by comparing titers in squalene-coated wells with titers in uncoated wells. A decrease of titer by more than 50% in uncoated wells was used to classify the reactivity as specific.
The method for the detection of serum antisqualene IgM antibodies was similar to that used for the detection of IgG except for the use of bovine serum albumin instead of casein for the blocking of the uncoated sites, the appropriate assay controls, and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-human IgM Fc fragment-specific antibody. Due to slightly higher nonspecific signals for IgM than for IgG, IgM values were considered positive from titers of
40.
Both assays were validated. Validation parameters included specificity, dilutional linearity, precision, plate homogeneity, analyte stability, plate coating stability, and determination of baseline serum level. The range of detection was between 10 and 1,280 for both assays. The coefficient of variation was 6.7% for the IgG assay and 12.1% for the IgM assay.
Statistical analysis.
Geometric mean titers (GMT) of serum IgG and IgM antisqualene antibodies, with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), were calculated by taking the exponents (base 10) of the least-squares means and of the lower and upper limits of associated 95% CI of the log10-transformed titers. Least-squares means, 95% CI, and P values were calculated by a general linear model with the vaccine type as a factor. To evaluate IgG and IgM antibody changes from baseline, time was also included in the general linear model with repeated measures for subjects. The proportions of subjects who had IgG titers of >20 and IgM titers of >40 were compared by
2 test and by logistic regression.
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TABLE 1. Frequencies and GMT of serum IgG and IgM antibodies against squalene from healthy adults never immunized with vaccines with the MF59 adjuvant
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TABLE 2. Percentages of individuals with antisqualene IgG and IgM antibodies after vaccination with influenza vaccine with or without the MF59 adjuvant
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10 and
40, respectively). It should be added that when more than one serum sample was available from the same subject, no trend towards an increase or a decrease of antisqualene antibody titers was evident (not shown).
Antisqualene antibody titers are not influenced by immunization with vaccines with the MF59 adjuvant. Having shown that antisqualene antibodies are found frequently in the sera of healthy adults, we asked whether immunization with vaccines with the MF59 emulsion adjuvant (which contains squalene) would enhance antibody titers over time. To this end, we tested IgM and IgG antibodies in the sera of 48 individuals immunized with the influenza subunit vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant and 52 individuals immunized with the control, split vaccine without adjuvant. As shown in Fig. 1, prevaccination serum antisqualene IgG and IgM antibody titers were not affected by vaccination with influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant either 1 month or 6 months after vaccination. In addition, the serum IgG and IgM antisqualene antibody titers for subjects immunized with the influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant did not differ significantly from those measured for subjects immunized with the vaccine without adjuvant at any of the time points studied (before, 1 month after, or 6 months after vaccination).
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FIG. 1. Antisqualene IgG and IgM antibodies in serum samples from individuals vaccinated with subunit influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant (n = 48) or with a plain, split influenza vaccine without the MF59 adjuvant (n = 52). Vertical lines represent 95% CI. None of the differences (either between vaccines or between time points with one vaccine) were statistically significant (P values ranged between 0.130 [vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant versus vaccine without, IgG titers 1 month after vaccination] and 0.863). There were no trends over time detected as significant for either vaccine or either antibody (P 0.6212).
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Our study confirms that squalene is very poorly immunogenic. Indeed, in studies carried out by Matyas et al. (12), antibodies against squalene were elicited in mice only when squalene was formulated within liposomes containing endotoxin (lipid A). These data are in agreement with those previously reported showing that antibodies against cholesterol could be induced after immunization of mice with cholesterol-loaded liposomes containing lipid A (18).
A clear finding of our study is that the vast majority of healthy adults have antibodies to squalene circulating in their sera. It is of note that these antibodies were found in individuals from various geographical areas, such as the United States, western Europe, and eastern Europe, which to our knowledge had never received vaccines or other pharmacological treatments containing squalene. The statistically significant difference found among the three cohorts studied here cannot be ascribed to vaccinations, since these people were never vaccinated previously with vaccines containing MF59. In some cohorts, the frequency of individuals with detectable levels of antisqualene antibodies was as high as 100%. This finding is reminiscent of similar findings reported by Alving et al. (2), who showed that virtually all normal human sera contain naturally occurring antibodies against cholesterol. One may speculate that these naturally occurring antisqualene antibodies could behave as an immunomodulating mechanism for regulation of LDL and VLDL metabolism, as proposed for anticholesterol antibodies (3), since LDL and VLDL transport both squalene and cholesterol in the bloodstream (13). The hypothetical role of naturally occurring antisqualene antibodies still needs formal demonstration.
Due to its natural occurrence, squalene was used as the oil phase in the design of new adjuvant preparations, such as MF59. MF59 emulsion is used as an adjuvant for an influenza subunit vaccine licensed since 1997 in various countries in and outside Europe (16). More than 20 million doses of this influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant have been distributed with an excellent safety profile. In addition, MF59 has been tested and is being tested in clinical trials as an adjuvant for several new vaccines for various age groups and has always been associated with a good clinical tolerability (16).
The interest in antisqualene antibodies was raised by reports claiming that these antibodies were detected in the sera of military personnel with the so-called Gulf War syndrome (4, 5). These reports were criticized on technical grounds, since the assay employed (Western blotting) was not validated and lacked any controls (1). In addition, these claims were considered inconclusive by the Institute of Medicine (7). Using a validated ELISA, we have shown formally that no increases in antisqualene antibodies over and above preexisting levels are observed following vaccination with influenza vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant, either at 1 month or at 6 months postvaccination. Interestingly enough, antisqualene antibodies were found at identical titers in the sera of control subjects that had been immunized with an influenza split vaccine without adjuvant.
In conclusion, we have shown that antisqualene antibodies of both IgG and IgM isotypes are detected very frequently in the sera of healthy adult individuals of different ages and from various geographical areas. Additionally, we have shown that vaccines with the squalene-containing MF59 adjuvant emulsion do not induce any increase either in the titer or in the proportion of subjects with antibodies against squalene. These data add to the safety profile of the MF59 adjuvant emulsion, already shown by extensive clinical trials and with the regular use of the licensed vaccine with the MF59 adjuvant in routine influenza immunization practices.
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