Literature DB >> 1822908

Cestode vaccines.

M D Rickard1.   

Abstract

Studies over the past 20 years have clearly shown the potential for developing vaccines against larval cestode infections of man and animals. The important larval cestode infections of man (Echinococcus granulosus--hydatidosis: Taenia solium--cysticercosis) involve domesticated animals as intermediate hosts in their natural life-cycles. These animals develop strong immunity against reinfection, and immunity can be artificially induced by vaccination with oncosphere antigens. A major stumbling block in developing commercial vaccines against cestodes has been the difficulty in obtaining adequate supplies of these antigens. Recent studies with Taenia ovis, a larval cestode causing cysticercosis in sheep, have demonstrated the feasibility of developing commercial vaccines against cestodes using recombinant DNA technology. A cDNA library prepared using mRNA obtained from T. ovis oncospheres was used to isolate a clone which expressed T. ovis polypeptide antigen 45W as a fusion protein with Schistosoma japonicum glutathione S-transferase (GST-45W). GST-45W gave up to 94% protection against challenge infection when used to vaccinate sheep with saponin as adjuvant. The vaccine antigen was shown by SDS PAGE to be unstable, a major disadvantage in subsequent attempts to obtain high yields of antigen for commercial production. The fusion protein has now been stabilized by reducing the size of GST-45W cDNA through deleting 19 carboxyl terminal hydropathic acids, and the resultant fusion protein GST-45W (B/X) was highly host-protective. Another experiment showed that the 45W T. ovis polypeptide cleaved enzymatically from GST-45W was still host-protective, suggesting that GST had no influence on the immunogenicity of GST-45W fusion protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1822908

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Southeast Asian J Trop Med Public Health        ISSN: 0125-1562            Impact factor:   0.267


  2 in total

1.  Characterization of S3Pvac anti-cysticercosis vaccine components: implications for the development of an anti-cestodiasis vaccine.

Authors:  Dunia Rassy; Raúl J Bobes; Gabriela Rosas; Victor H Anaya; Klaus Brehm; Beatriz Hernández; Jacquelynne Cervantes; Saúl Pedraza; Julio Morales; Nelly Villalobos; Aline S de Aluja; Juan P Laclette; Caris M Nunes; Germano F Biondi; Gladis Fragoso; Marisela Hernández; Edda Sciutto
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-06-23       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Analyses of an expressed sequence tag library from Taenia solium, Cysticerca.

Authors:  Jonas Lundström; Fernando Salazar-Anton; Ellen Sherwood; Björn Andersson; Johan Lindh
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2010-12-21
  2 in total

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