Published August 4, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Immunostimulatory Polymers as Adjuvants, Immunotherapies, and Delivery Systems

Description

Activating innate immunity in a controlled manner is necessary for the development of next-generation therapeutics. Adjuvants, or molecules that modulate the immune response, are critical components of vaccines and immunotherapies. While small molecules and biologics dominate the adjuvant market, emerging evidence supports the use of immunostimulatory polymers in therapeutics. Such polymers can stabilize and deliver cargo while stimulating the immune system by functioning as pattern recognition receptor (PRR) agonists. At the same time, in designing polymers that engage the immune system, it is important to consider any unintended initiation of an immune response that results in adverse immune-related events. Here, we highlight biologically derived and synthetic polymer scaffolds, as well as polymer–adjuvant systems and stimuli-responsive polymers loaded with adjuvants, that can invoke an immune response. We present synthetic considerations for the design of such immunostimulatory polymers, outline methods to target their delivery, and discuss their application in therapeutics. Finally, we conclude with our opinions on the design of next-generation immunostimulatory polymers, new applications of immunostimulatory polymers, and the development of improved preclinical immunocompatibility tests for new polymers.

Files

Immunostimulatory-Polymers-as-Adjuvants-Immunotherapies-and-Delivery-Systems.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.macromol.2c00854
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5519

Funding

National Institutes of Health
Chemistry–Biology Interface training grant
National Institutes of Health
U01AI124286
DTRA
1-18-1-0052
National Science Foundation
NSF PIRE program
National Institutes of Health
CA253248
National Institutes of Health
CA219304
AbbVie-UChicago Program in Immuno-oncology

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Chemistry