mRNA-LNP vaccines against Hepatitis B virus induce protective immune responses in preventive and chronic mouse challenge models

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Abstract

Over 300 million people worldwide suffer from chronic hepatitis B virus infections that can cause serious liver damage and hepatocellular carcinoma. Ineffective innate and adaptive immune responses characterize these chronic infections, making the development of a therapeutic vaccine an urgent medical need. While current vaccines can prevent HBV infections, they are ineffective in treating chronic disease. This study investigated lipid nanoparticle (LNP)-formulated nucleoside-modified mRNA vaccines encoding Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) for prophylactic and therapeutic applications. We found that HBsAg mRNA-LNP vaccines induced robust humoral and cellular immune responses, outperforming the protein-based vaccine approved for human use. The incorporation of an MHC class I signal peptide further enhanced Th1-biased responses preventing HBV infections in a mouse model. Importantly, mRNA-LNP vaccination led to seroconversion, HBsAg clearance, and strong T cell responses in a chronically infected mouse model. These findings highlight the potential of mRNA-LNP as an alternative and effective vaccine modality for HBV prophylaxis and therapeutic use in treating chronic infections.

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