Prime-Boost Strategies in DNA Vaccines
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Authors
Dale, C Jane
Thomson, Scott
De Rose, Robert
Medveczky, C
Pamungkas, Joko
Boyle, David B
Ramshaw, Ian
Kent, Stephen J
Ranasinghe, Charani
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Humana Press Inc.
Abstract
Induction of HIV-specific T-cell responses by vaccines may facilitate efficient control of HIV replication. Plasmid DNA vaccines and recombinant fowlpox virus (rFPV) vaccines are promising HIV-1 vaccine candidates, although delivering either vaccine alone may be insufficient to induce sufficient T-cell responses. A consecutive immunization strategy, known as "prime-boost," involving priming with DNA and boosting with rFPV vaccines encoding multiple common HIV antigens, is used to induce broad and high-level T-cell immunity and ameliorate AIDS in macaques. This vaccine strategy is proceeding to clinical trials. This chapter describes the use of prime-boost vaccines to induce T-cell responses against HIV-1 and protective immunity against AIDS in macaques. Methods for the construction of the vaccines, the use of animal models, and the detection of immune responses are described.
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Book Title
DNA Vaccines: Methods and Protocols (2nd ed)
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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