Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10967972 | Vaccine | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Orally delivered replicating adenovirus (Ad) vaccines have been used for decades to prevent adenovirus serotype 4 and 7 respiratory illness in military recruits, demonstrating exemplary safety and high efficacy. That experience suggests that oral administration of live recombinant Ads (rAds) holds promise for immunization against other infectious diseases, including those that have been refractory to traditional vaccination methods. Live rAds can express intact antigens from free-standing transgenes during replication in infected cells. Alternatively, antigenic epitopes can be displayed on the rAd capsid itself, allowing presentation of the epitope to the immune system both prior to and during replication of the virus. Such capsid-display rAds offer a novel vaccine approach that could be used either independently of or in combination with transgene expression strategies to provide a new tool in the search for protection from infectious disease.
Keywords
HBsAgNaBM2ePEIFriend murine leukemia virusVR1RADOVAoprFRGDCSPHVRSmajor histocompatibility complex IMHC class IMHC class IIAdenovirusRecombinant adenovirusNeutralizing antibodieshepatitis B virus surface antigenInfluenza hemagglutininOral administrationmajor histocompatibility complex IIOvalbuminPreexisting immunityVirus particlesHypervariable regionswild-typeHexonVaccine
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Immunology
Authors
Cailin Deal, Andrew Pekosz, Gary Ketner,