A two-step regimen of experimental vaccines against Middle East respiratory
syndrome (MERS) prompted immune responses in mice and rhesus macaques, report
National Institutes of Health scientists who designed the vaccines. Vaccinated
mice produced broadly neutralizing antibodies against multiple strains of the
MERS coronavirus (MERS-CoV), while vaccinated macaques were protected from
severe lung damage when later exposed to MERS-CoV. The findings suggest that the
current approach, in which vaccine design is guided by an understanding of
structure of viral components and their interactions with host cells, holds
promise for developing a similar human MERS vaccine regimen.
Currently, no licensed vaccines are available for MERS, a disease that
first appeared in 2012. An outbreak in the Republic of Korea that began in May
has caused more than 180 confirmed infections, including 36 deaths, through July
15 as well as widespread social disruption.
The research team was led by Barney S. Graham, M.D., Ph.D., Wing-Pui Kong,
Ph.D., and colleagues at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases' Vaccine Research Center. The investigators used structural information
about a viral protein called the spike (S) glycoprotein, which MERS-CoV uses to
enter cells, to design a number of experimental vaccines that they administered
to mice in a two-step regimen involving an initial "priming" injection followed
several weeks later by the same or a different "booster" vaccine.
The three prime-boost regimens that elicited the most robust immune
responses in mice were then tested in groups of macaques and were found to
elicit similar immune system responses. A separate group of 18 macaques (12
vaccinated, six unvaccinated) were exposed to MERS-CoV 19 weeks after the
vaccinated animals received the boost injection. Although macaques do not
develop overt MERS disease, the researchers observed that unvaccinated animals
experienced lung abnormalities indicative of pneumonia that were more profound
and longer lasting than those seen in the vaccinated animals. The team is now
working on refining the vaccine candidates and may eventually test a
second-generation vaccine candidate in clinical trials.
Read more:http://www.cusabio.com/catalog-13-1.html
没有评论:
发表评论