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- Title
- Immunogenicity of virus like particle forming baculoviral DNA vaccine against pandemic influenza H1N1
- Author(s)
- Y D Kwon; S Kim; Y Cho; Y Heo; H Cho; K Park; H J Lee; J Choi; Haryoung Poo; Y B Kim
- Bibliographic Citation
- PLoS One, vol. 11, no. 5, pp. e0154824-e0154824
- Publication Year
- 2016
- Abstract
- An outbreak of influenza H1N1 in 2009, representing the first influenza pandemic of the
21st century, was transmitted to over a million individuals and claimed 18,449 lives. The current
status in many countries is to prepare influenza vaccine using cell-based or egg-based
killed vaccine. However, traditional influenza vaccine platforms have several limitations. To
overcome these limitations, many researchers have tried various approaches to develop
alternative production platforms. One of the alternative approach, we reported the efficacy
of influenza HA vaccination using a baculoviral DNA vaccine (AcHERV-HA). However, the
immune response elicited by the AcHERV-HA vaccine, which only targets the HA antigen,
was lower than that of the commercial killed vaccine. To overcome the limitations of this previous
vaccine, we constructed a human endogenous retrovirus (HERV) envelope-coated,
baculovirus-based, virus-like-particle (VLP)?forming DNA vaccine (termed AcHERV-VLP)
against pandemic influenza A/California/04/2009 (pH1N1). BALB/c mice immunized with
AcHERV-VLP (1×107 FFU AcHERV-VLP, i.m.) and compared with mice immunized with
the killed vaccine or mice immunized with AcHERV-HA. As a result, AcHERV-VLP immunization
produced a greater humoral immune response and exhibited neutralizing activity
with an intrasubgroup H1 strain (PR8), elicited neutralizing antibody production, a high level
of interferon-γ secretion in splenocytes, and diminished virus shedding in the lung after challenge
with a lethal dose of influenza virus. In conclusion, VLP-forming baculovirus DNA vaccine
could be a potential vaccine candidate capable of efficiently delivering DNA to the
vaccinee and VLP forming DNA eliciting stronger immunogenicity than egg-based killed
vaccines.
- ISSN
- 1932-6203
- Publisher
- Public Library of Science
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154824
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- Division of Research on National Challenges > Infectious Disease Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
- Files in This Item:
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