(Closed) ImmuneNanoVac – Nanomaterials to design new vaccine adjuvants - UT Austin Portugal (original) (raw)

Summary

Title Nanomaterials to design new vaccine adjuvants
Reference UTA-EXPL/NPN/0082/2019
Scientific Area Nanotechnologies
Funding (PT) 50 000,00 EUR
Funding (US) 49 998,00 USD
Leading Institutions Instituto de Medicina Molecular João Lobo Antunes (IMM/FM/ULisboa) Department of Biomedical Engineering, Institute for Biomaterials, Drug Delivery and Regenerative Medicine Cockrell School of Engineering, UT Austin
Participating Institutions Faculty of Pharmacy Research and Development Association (FARM-ID)
Duration 12 months
Begin date October 1, 2020
End date September 30, 2021
Keywords Antibodies, T cells, B cells, Nanoparticles, Immune regulation

Although vaccines are among therapies with the greatest impact on health, there is still a need to improve vaccine efficacy among groups with decaying immune function. By advancing the knowledge on reprogramming host immune responses by nanoparticulate systems, the ImmuneNanoVac project will lead to the identification of optimal nanomaterials to improve vaccine efficacy in vulnerable groups.

The protection afforded by vaccination (namely against influenza) is important but still sub-optimal. The exploitation of the results achieved with the development of nanomaterials for cancer immunotherapy, as well as the expertise in germinal center biology will boost vaccine responses through the use of nanoparticles to deliver adjuvants and immunizing antigens.

The ImmuneNanoVac project has the potential to increase vaccine efficacy among individuals that are more susceptible to severe consequences of infection, such as influenza or COVID-19.

Key Outcomes

Papers and Communications

E-Posters

2021 Annual Conference

Project Team

Exploratory ResearchNanotechnologies

Luís Graça

Principal Investigator in Portugal (IMM/FM/ULisboa)
ImmuneNanoVac

Exploratory ResearchNanotechnologies

Nicholas A. Peppas

Principal Investigator in Austin (UT Austin)
ImmuneNanoVac