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An Envelope Domain III–based Chimeric Antigen Produced in Pichia pastoris Elicits Neutralizing Antibodies Against All Four Dengue Virus Serotypes
94
Citations
51
References
2008
Year
Chimeric Antigen ProducedImmunologyDen Virus SerotypesViral Structural ProteinImmunotherapyTetravalent Den VaccineVaccine TargetPichia PastorisEnvelope DomainHost-pathogen InteractionsVaccine DevelopmentVirologyPolyvalent VaccineBiomolecular EngineeringVaccinationPathogenesisMicrobiologyVaccine DesignMedicineViral Immunity
There is currently no vaccine to prevent dengue (DEN) virus infection, which is caused by any one of four closely related serotypes, DEN-1, DEN-2, DEN-3, or DEN-4. A DEN vaccine must be tetravalent, because immunity to a single serotype does not offer cross-protection against the other serotypes. We have developed a novel tetravalent chimeric protein by fusing the receptor-binding envelope domain III (EDIII) of the four DEN virus serotypes. This protein was expressed in the yeast, Pichia pastoris, and purified to near homogeneity in high yields. Antibodies induced in mice by the tetravalent protein, formulated in different adjuvants, neutralized the infectivity of all four serotypes. This, coupled with the high expression potential of the P. pastoris system and easy one-step purification, makes the EDIII-based recombinant protein a potentially promising candidate for the development of a safe, efficacious, and inexpensive, tetravalent DEN vaccine.
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