نتایج جستجو برای: mucosal vaccine delivery

تعداد نتایج: 344745  

Journal: :Vaccine 2003
Sangeeta B Periwal Kristin R Kourie Nandini Ramachandaran Susan J Blakeney Sylvia DeBruin Duzhang Zhu Timothy J Zamb Larry Smith Steve Udem John H Eldridge Khushroo E Shroff Patricia A Reilly

In this study, we evaluated the potential of a genetically modified cholera toxin, CT-E29H as an adjuvant for recombinant Norwalk virus like particle (NV-VLP) vaccine. This detoxified mutant, containing E to H substitution at amino acid 29 of the CT-A1 subunit, was administered with a recombinant Norwalk virus like particle vaccine to Balb/c mice by mucosal routes to monitor the induction of mu...

2012
Sae-Hae Kim Kyung-Yeol Lee Yong-Suk Jang

Vaccination is one of the most effective methods available to prevent infectious diseases. Mucosa, which are exposed to heavy loads of commensal and pathogenic microorganisms, are one of the first areas where infections are established, and therefore have frontline status in immunity, making mucosa ideal sites for vaccine application. Moreover, vaccination through the mucosal immune system coul...

2012
Assunta Pelosi David Piedrafita Giorgio De Guzman Robert Shepherd John D. Hamill Els Meeusen Amanda M. Walmsley

Antigen-specific antibody responses against a model antigen (the B subunit of the heat labile toxin of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli, LTB) were studied in sheep following oral immunisation with plant-made and delivered vaccines. Delivery from a root-based vehicle resulted in antigen-specific immune responses in mucosal secretions of the abomasum and small intestine and mesenteric lymph nodes...

Journal: :Medical sciences 2018
Valentina Yurina

Vaccination is one of the most successful immunology applications that has considerably improved human health. The DNA vaccine is a new vaccine being developed since the early 1990s. Although the DNA vaccine is promising, no human DNA vaccine has been approved to date. The main problem facing DNA vaccine efficacy is the lack of a DNA vaccine delivery system. Several studies explored this limita...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2013
Rajko Reljic Laura Sibley Jen-Min Huang Ilaria Pepponi Andreas Hoppe Huynh A Hong Simon M Cutting

Needle-free, mucosal immunization is a highly desirable strategy for vaccination against many pathogens, especially those entering through the respiratory mucosa, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Unfortunately, mucosal vaccination against tuberculosis (TB) is impeded by a lack of suitable adjuvants and/or delivery platforms that could induce a protective immune response in humans. Here, we r...

Journal: :FEMS immunology and medical microbiology 2000
E Medina C A Guzmán

Most microbial infections are either restricted to the mucosal membranes or the etiologic agents needed to transit the mucosa. Thus, it is desirable to stimulate a mucosal response following vaccination, to block both infection and disease development. Attenuated vaccine carriers mimic natural infections, triggering also mucosal responses. Similar results can be achieved by administering antige...

2014
Renata Monteiro-Maia Rosa Teixeira de Pinho

The bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine is the only licensed vaccine for human use against tuberculosis (TB). Although controversy exists about its efficacy, the BCG vaccine is able to protect newborns and children against disseminated forms of TB, but fails to protect adults against active forms of TB. In the last few years, interest in the mucosal delivery route for the vaccine has been in...

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