Islamabad, Jan 21 : A new vaccine strategy using nanoparticles as carriers may be the
key to developing a vaccine against norovirus, one of the most common causes of
foodborne disease in the United States.
Researchers from the Cincinnati
Children's Hospital Medical Center report promising findings in the January 2011
issue of the Journal of Virology.
The application of nanoparticles as
carriers to present small peptide antigens is a growing field within vaccine
development. Researchers led by Xi Jason Jiang of Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Medical Center, have described a new nanocarrier, called a P particle, which
holds promise as a scaffold for a variety of vaccines. In the current study they
inserted rotavirus antigen into the P particle, which boosted immune response to
rotavirus, as well as norovirus, in mice.
Both rotavirus and norovirus
are important causes of acute gastroenteritis. The former causes severe diarrhea
in children, and kills an estimated 527,000 worldwide, annually. Norovirus is a
notably highly transmissible, and particularly unpleasant flu, which can result
in one to three days of vomiting and diarrhea in otherwise healthy adults, and
which kills 200,000 children annually.
"The dual vaccine holds promise
for controlling gastroenteritis in children," says Jiang.
The P
particle's unique feature is the scaffold. The P particle consists of 24 copies
of an outer coat protein from norovirus. The beauty of the P particle is that it
contains three types of surface loops, which are ideal for presenting a wide
variety of antigens. Additionally, it is highly immunogenic and extremely
stable, the latter an important quality for use in developing nations. The
antigens can easily be inserted during the manufacturing process. Production is
a simple matter of expressing the cloned P particle in E. coli.
In
addition to the rotavirus antigen, the team has succeeded in inserting a number
of antigens into the P particle, varying in size up to more than 200 amino
acids. The resulting vaccines have induced significantly stronger immune
responses in mice than have free antigens.
Jiang is principal
investigator for a five year, $4.1 million grant from the National Institute of
Allergy & Infectious Disease (NIAID) that Cincinnati Children's received
last May to develop the P particle vaccine against norovirus. "With the unique
features of high efficiency, easy production, and low cost, this new platform
will find a broad application in the biomedical sciences," says
Jiang.
Ends
SA/EN
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Nanoparticle vaccine protects against stomach flu
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