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mRNA Based Vaccine Studies in Infectious Diseases and Current Developments
Volume: 1, Issue: 4, Pages: 8 - 18
Published: Jan 22, 2021
Abstract
Başlangıçta genetik hastalıkların tedavisinde in-vivo protein ekspresyonu için geliştirilen mRNA teknolojisi, terapötik kanser aşıları yönüne doğru gelişirken, bu aşıların tolere edilebilirliği ve immünojenisitesi ile ilgili ilk veriler bu yeni platformun geleneksel aşı...
Paper Details
Title
mRNA Based Vaccine Studies in Infectious Diseases and Current Developments
Published Date
Jan 22, 2021
Volume
1
Issue
4
Pages
8 - 18
References41
Original paper
# 1Fernando P. Polack(SUNY Upstate Medical University)
46
# 2Stephen J. Thomas(SUNY Upstate Medical University)
53
Last. William C. Gruber(SUNY Upstate Medical University)
68
BackgroundSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and the resulting coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) have afflicted tens of millions of people in a worldwide pandemic. Safe and effective vaccines are needed urgently.MethodsIn an ongoing multinational, placebo-controlled, observer-blinded, pivotal efficacy trial, we randomly assigned persons 16 years of age or older in a 1:1 ratio to receive two doses, 21 days apart, of either placebo or the BNT162b2 vaccine cand...
Original paper
# 1Lena M. Kranz(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)
14
# 2Mustafa Diken(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)
36
Last. Uğur Şahin(BioNTech (Germany))
87
The development of a nanoparticle RNA vaccine is reported that preferentially targets dendritic cells after systemic administration, and is shown to provide durable interferon-α-dependent antigen-specific immunity in mouse tumour models; initial results in advanced melanoma patients indicate potential efficacy in humans. The systemic delivery of vaccine antigens into the dendritic or antigen-presenting cells of the immune system faces many technical challenges. This study reports the development...
Original paper
# 1Justin M. Richner(WUSTL: Washington University in St. Louis)
25
# 2Sunny Himansu
16
Last. Michael Diamond(WUSTL: Washington University in St. Louis)
140
Original paper
# 1Norbert Pardi(University of Pennsylvania)
42
# 2Michael J. Hogan(University of Pennsylvania)
40
Last. Drew Weissman(University of Pennsylvania)
71
A single, low-dose intradermal immunization with lipid-nanoparticle-encapsulated nucleoside-modified mRNA encoding the pre-membrane and envelope glycoproteins of Zika virus protects both mice and rhesus macaques against infection and elicits rapid and long-lasting neutralizing antibody responses. Public health efforts to combat Zika virus disease are hampered by lack of a safe and efficient vaccine. Drew Weissman and colleagues report the development of a candidate vaccine that is based on chemi...
Original paper
# 1Andrew J. Geall(NPC: Novartis (United States))
26
# 2Ayush Verma(Novartis (Switzerland))
17
Last. Christian W. Mandl(Novartis (Switzerland))
53
Despite more than two decades of research and development on nucleic acid vaccines, there is still no commercial product for human use. Taking advantage of the recent innovations in systemic delivery of short interfering RNA (siRNA) using lipid nanoparticles (LNPs), we developed a self-amplifying RNA vaccine. Here we show that nonviral delivery of a 9-kb self-amplifying RNA encapsulated within an LNP substantially increased immunogenicity compared with delivery of unformulated RNA. This unique v...
Original paper
# 1Karl S. Peggs(UCL: University College London)
72
# 2Stephanie Verfuerth(UCL: University College London)
16
Last. Stephen Mackinnon(UCL: University College London)
60
Adoptive transfer of CMV-specific T cells offers the potential for reconstitution of viral immunity after allogeneic transplantation. However, the logistics of producing virus-specific T-cell clones has limited the application of cellular therapies. We treated 16 patients for CMV infection with polyclonal CMV-specific T-cell lines generated by short-term culture. Massive in-vivo expansions of CMV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes were observed, resulting in reconstitution of viral immunity. In ei...
Original paper
We evaluated safety and immunogenicity of the first mRNA vaccines against potentially pandemic avian H10N8 and H7N9 influenza viruses. Two randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, phase 1 clinical trials enrolled participants between December 2015 and August 2017 at single centers in Germany (H10N8) and USA (H7N9). Healthy adults (ages 18–64 years for H10N8 study; 18–49 years for H7N9 study) participated. Participants received vaccine or placebo in a 2-dose vaccination series 3 weeks apart....
Original paper
# 1Jasdave S. Chahal(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research)
10
# 2Omar F. Khan(MIT: Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
27
Last. Daniel G. Anderson(MIT: Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
42
Vaccines have had broad medical impact, but existing vaccine technologies and production methods are limited in their ability to respond rapidly to evolving and emerging pathogens, or sudden outbreaks. Here, we develop a rapid-response, fully synthetic, single-dose, adjuvant-free dendrimer nanoparticle vaccine platform wherein antigens are encoded by encapsulated mRNA replicons. To our knowledge, this system is the first capable of generating protective immunity against a broad spectrum of letha...
Review paper
# 1R Verbeke(Ghent University)
24
# 2Ine Lentacker(Ghent University)
37
Last. Heleen Dewitte(Ghent University)
22
Original paper
# 1Justin M. Richner(WUSTL: Washington University in St. Louis)
25
# 2Brett W. Jagger(WUSTL: Washington University in St. Louis)
23
Last. Michael Diamond(WUSTL: Washington University in St. Louis)
140
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