In addition to solving the longstanding problem of productivity for monoclonal antibodies the nanoparticle approach can be applied to many other therapeutic proteins and also to viral vaccines.
vaccinations, cancer imaging and other medical treatments. Currently, the predominant practice is using viruses for delivery to cells.
and U s. federal agencies want to fast-track human trials of a promising vaccine. If all goes well,
the vaccine may be available sometime in 2015, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases, told USA Today.
It notably supports citizen empowerment through self management of health and disease health promotion and disease prevention.
was conducted by a team from the Vaccine Research center at the U s. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases (NIAID) in Bethesda, Maryland.
director of NIAID Vaccine Research center and head of the group reporting the Nature Communications study.
says draining a reservoir ultimately may require combining bispecific antibodies with other latency reversing approaches and immune system stimulators like anti-HIV vaccines.
and vaccines traditionally given by injection. Cheap, lightweight and portable, the advanced nebulizer delivers precise drug doses to patients with life-threatening
or to painlessly vaccinate infants currently subjected to needles. Professor Leslie Yeo, Director of RMIT University Micronanophysics Research Laboratory, said the Respite technology had the potential to revolutionize how patients were treated with drugs
Recent trials in Melbourne also showed sheep given a DNA flu vaccine via a nebulizer had comparable immune responses to animals injected with the vaccine.
This makes the development of an effective vaccine to protect against infection, as well as antiviral therapy to combat already-existing infections,
Administering a vaccine to protect against infection would overwhelm the patient's immune system. However, if he or she has the option of receiving an antiviral to eliminate the infection,
#Archaeal Gas Vesicle Nanoparticles Hold Potential to Develop Powerful Malaria Vaccine In a recent breakthrough to combat malaria,
The finding points towards developing a powerful malaria vaccine in the hope of eradicating this debilitating and often fatal disease.
Development of an antimalarial vaccine is an integral part of an effort to counter the socioeconomic burden of malaria.
and this conjugated system was used to vaccinate mice. Interestingly, a subsequent challenge with a lethal strain of mouse malaria parasite in these vaccinated animals showed considerable protection against malaria.
Says Prof. Dassarma, Phd, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the school,"GVNPS offer a designer platform for vaccines
and this work is a significant step forward towards a new malaria vaccine.""This study is a significant advance in the field,
since most other vaccine candidate molecules tested so far confer protection against only a single species of parasite, due to the species and strain specific nature of these molecules."
"The small segment of five amino acids that forms a protective epitope is present in all human malaria causing species of Plasmodium and hence,
Efforts are focused now at developing this into an effective vaccine against malaria a
#Miniature Plastic Digital Fluorescence Microscope for use in Rural areas For a project funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Grand Challenges in Global Health Initiative,
A team of scientists at the Vaccine Research center (VRC) of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases, part of NIH, created VRC07-acd3 under the leadership of VRC Director John R. Mascola, M d.;
Using the test in healthy people could also lead to a personalised approach to influenza vaccination.
At present, an annual flu vaccine is recommended for groups such as the over-65s pregnant women and people with chronic medical conditions, who are believed to be at greater risk of influenza complications.
Identifying those who are genetically susceptible could help doctors to decide more accurately who should receive influenza vaccination n
and ultra-low cost vaccine manufacturing, says Govind Rao who leads the research at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) Center for Advanced Sensor Technology.
Cell-free production tech could be used to produce low-cost vaccines tremendous paradigm shift is definitely comingas well as personalised medicines.
and ultra-low cost vaccine manufacturing, says Govind Rao who leads the research at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) Center for Advanced Sensor Technology.
Cell-free production tech could be used to produce low-cost vaccines tremendous paradigm shift is definitely comingas well as personalised medicines.
particularly when there are flu vaccine shortages or limitations.""A therapy based on these inhaled drugs may help deal with new viral and bacterial strains that are resistant to conventional vaccines
and treatments and could be a game changer in terms of our preparedness for future pandemics and seasonal flu outbreaks because it's focusing on host immunity,
#Bacterial Study Points to Possible New MRSA Vaccine New research led by NYU Langone has uncovered why a particular strain of Staphylococcus aureusnown as HA-MRSAECOMES more deadly than other variations.
These new findings open up possible new pathways to vaccine development against this bacterium, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said accounts for over 10,000 deaths annually, mostly among hospital patients.
Torres also said that these study results challenge the current mindset for finding a vaccine against staphylococcal infections,
in order to develop an effective vaccine. n a separate set of laboratory experiments previously described in the journal Cell Host & Microbe online August 27, researchers at Torreslaboratory and colleagues in The netherlands, France,
#Britain Becomes First Nation to Offer Meningitis B Vaccine After Tense Novartis AG Stand-Off The United kingdom will officially become the first country in the world to offer a vaccine for meningitis B after to infants covered under its national health system,
Britain will now be able to offer Glaxo Bexsero vaccine, formerly part of Novartis AG (NVS) vaccine portfolio under its massive asset swap earlier this year.
estimated Reuters. U k. Health Secretary Jeremy hunt said Sunday he was pleased xceptionally that we will be the first country on the planet to have a nationwide Men B vaccination program. e had a stand-off really for the best part of
a year with the company that used to own this vaccine but since GSK have come on board they have reduced the price
and that means we can now go ahead this year with rolling out the meningitis B vaccine,
"Antiretroviral treatments are not vaccines; they simply keep HIV in check in low levels in the body.
This is relevant for different drugs as growth hormones, vaccines and insulin. Many diabetics need to daily inject insulin directly into their body,
vaccines, etc. What did the researchers do in the lab? S. islandicus was grown for four days at 75 degrees Celsius.
#Researcher develops vaccine for fatal disease Over 200 million people in 74 countries suffer from schistosomiasis
Afzal A. Siddiqui, Ph d.,has tested his new vaccine in animals and is now planning human trials.
Siddiqui, a Grover E. Murray Distinguished Professor at the TTUHSC School of medicine, received a patent from the U s. Patent and Trademark Office for his schistosomiasis vaccine.
The vaccine""Schistoshield"potentially can impact up to one billion people. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the National institutes of health have supported Siddiqui's research."
"We worked to get the patent to deter others from making money off this vaccine,
"This way, it can be made for $1 per vaccination and distributed to those in need.
An effective schistosomiasis vaccine has the potential to impact one billion people.""Praziquantel, a drug developed over 40 years ago,
An effective vaccine is critical toward providing long-term treatment. This schistosomiasis vaccine offers unique opportunities for organizations to market it as a method for completely eliminating this disease.
The vaccine's advantages make it easy to sell because it eliminates the instances of re-infection common with the current chemotherapeutic drug,
is easier and less expensive to distribute and can be administered with current chemotherapy regimen. Long-term vaccine efficacy will effectively reduce the transmission of schistosomiasis in endemic areas.
According to the World health organization there are no commercially available vaccines against schistosomiasis, which afflicts people in countries primarily in Asia, Africa and South america.
Symptomatic schistosomiasis can result in increased susceptibility to sexually transmitted infections including HIV, which is prevalent in many countries plagued by schistosomiasis.
Durable and sustained reduction in the disease spectrum and transmission can only be obtained by long-term protection through vaccination.
Siddiqui has studied schistosomiasis for over 20 years working to develop this vaccine n
#Three-minute test detects common form of dementia that's hard to diagnose Although Lewy Body disease (LBD) is the second-most-common degenerative disease after Alzheimer's disease,
which to test viruses and vaccines. Professor Waterhouse made the discovery while tracing the history of the Pitjuri plant
which to test viruses and vaccines.""This plant is the'laboratory rat'of the molecular plant world,
were studying a malaria vaccine for pregnant women when they stumbled across what appears to be broad spectrum cancer cure in the form of a modified malaria strain.
The remaining 5 per cent the use of syringes to vaccinate against potential disease converted en masse to auto-disable syringes in 1999.
#Vaccine might replace surgery for cervical cancer A genetically engineered cervical cancer vaccine performed well in a clinical trial,
The vaccine eradicated high-grade precancerous cervical lesions in nearly half of women who received it, scientists report.
and pathology at Johns hopkins university School of medicine. vaccine able to cure precancerous lesions could eventually be one way women can avoid surgery that is invasive
If a vaccine is approved eventually for use, the slow development of cervical cancer would leave an opening for patients to try it. t typically takes about 10
involved a vaccine developed by University of Pennsylvania scientist David Weiner that is engineered to teach immune system cells to recognize precancerous and cancerous cells.
The women were assigned randomly to receive either three doses of the vaccine over a 12-week period or saline injections.
Of 114 who received at least one vaccine dose 55 (48.2 percent) had regression of their precancerous lesions,
The regression rate was closer to 50 percent in 107 women who received all three vaccine doses. n many of these women,
the vaccine not only made their lesions disappear, but it also cleared the virus from their cervix,
In biopsy samples, patients whose lesions completely regressed after vaccination had more immune T cells in the tissue. t important that T cells capable of recognizing HPV stay in the cervix
She is also studying other types of vaccines to prevent high-grade cervical lesions from developing into cancer.
The injection vaccine is made by Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc, . which funded the clinical trial and whose employees coauthored the report with Trimble.
He said romidepsin was a romising agent to check in future studies in combination with immunotherapies or vaccines.
which will use a combined therapy of romidepsin with a HIV vaccine to kill the infected cells. ombination studies are of highest interest now.
whether a vaccine would or would not be as effective. It may also help researchers understand why some people carry around viruses asymptomatically. e found on average that people carried about 5. 5 different viral genera that could cause disease in certain people,
including the equipment needed to keep vaccines at the right temperature, UNICEF is working to make sure the country's vaccines are stored properly,
and assessing the population to see if people may need to be vaccinated to prevent measles spread,
Tidey said. One challenge after disasters like the Nepal earthquake is just providing people with the care they would normally need in their daily lives."
"The flying vehicles could be used to deliver materials such as food, water and vaccines to people living in remote parts of the world,
and vaccines against many dangerous diseases including HIV, hepatitis and cancer. The research, led by Yury Stebunov,
that if you want to make vaccines out of nucleic acids or if you want to modulate the immune system using nucleic acids, for vaccines or systemic suppression therapies,
then the spherical nucleic acid architecture is likely the most potent t
#Nanospheres cooled with light to explore the limits of quantum physics A team of scientists at UCL led by Peter Barker
and vaccines against many dangerous diseases including HIV, hepatitis and cancer. The research, led by Yury Stebunov,
The researchers say this approach also could be used for vaccines or immunotherapies for other conditions such as cancer or AIDS o
which to test viruses and vaccines.""This plant is the'laboratory rat'of the molecular plant world,
And any parents who are concerned about the possible effects of vaccines have their hearts in the right place
and now a broad study of anti-vaccination websites helps to explain why. Researchers from the Johns hopkins university Bloomberg School of Public health analysed close to 500 anti-vaccination websites
and found that they deliver a distorted mixture of pseudoscience and misinformation to parents seeking information about vaccines.
According to the researchers, more than two thirds of anti-vaccination websites present nonscientific information and other forms of misinformation as cientific evidenceto support the view that vaccines are dangerous to children,
and nearly one third of sites reinforce the idea through the use of anecdotes and stories.
Facebook pages and health sites perpetuate an alarming mixture of misinformation about vaccines and use a range of persuasive techniques to get the reader on side.
Almost two thirds of the sites suggested that vaccines cause autism, and more than 40 percent claim theye responsible for rain injury The majority present information as scientific when it doesn actually qualify for that distinction.
In addition to condemning vaccines, the sites also promote some positive behaviours, such as healthy eating (recommended by 18.5 percent of anti-vaccination sites),
and the benefits of breastfeeding (5. 5 percent) and eating organic food (5. 2 percent). The study, presented this week at the American Public health Association annual meeting in Chicago,
and communicate with parents who are concerned genuinely about any perceived risks of vaccination (and who may be exposing themselves to potentially dangerous misinformation on these kinds of sites).
he biggest global takeaway is need that we to communicate to the vaccine-hesitant parent in a way that resonates with them
and reframe our communication in a way that makes sense to those parents resisting vaccines for their children. i
The early establishment of bifidobacteria has been shown to be associated with improved immune response to vaccines, development of the infants'immature immune system,
"This will improve vaccine development, lead to better treatment outcomes and ultimately benefit cancer patients
#Breast cancer vaccines may work better with silicon microparticles Model studies showed that microparticles loaded with an antigen, HER2,
"We could completely inhibit tumor growth after just one dose of the cancer vaccine in the animal model,
"Cancer vaccines are designed to turn a patient's own immune system more strongly against cancer cells, and have been an area of recent and intense interest among oncologists.
Since 2010, the FDA has approved vaccines and other immunotherapy drugs for melanoma, prostate cancer, and lung cancer.
There are currently dozens of active clinical trials evaluating vaccines for cancer therapy. Approximately 235,000 new diagnoses of breast cancer were made last year,
As yet, there are no FDA-approved vaccines for breast cancer. Such a vaccine might target HER2 a cell surface hormone receptor that is overexpressed in the tumor cells of 15 to 30 percent of breast cancer patients.
Such cells are called HER2+or HER2 positive. In this case, HER2 is both a naturally occurring hormone receptor and an antigen target for therapy.
A vaccine against HER2 would train the immune system's more destructive agents to recognize the cancer cells overproducing HER2
But so far, vaccines against HER2 have seen only moderate success."Vaccines targeting the HER2 oncoprotein have been tried,
"But these vaccines have mostly not been very potent because of inefficient vaccine delivery, a poor immune response at the site of the tumor,
We have shown that the PSM-mediated vaccine is not only potent enough to trigger tumor cell killing,
and that the PSMS could be loaded with multiple antigens for a single vaccine target, or multiple antigens for several targets, possibly enhancing the approach's effectiveness further."
"Besides developing a highly potent breast cancer vaccine, we have demonstrated also that PSMS are said versatile, "Shen."
"This is a technology platform that can be applied by other scientists to develop vaccines for other types of cancers, ultimately helping,
particularly when there are flu vaccine shortages or limitations.""A therapy based on these inhaled drugs may help deal with new viral and bacterial strains that are resistant to conventional vaccines
and treatments and could be a game changer in terms of our preparedness for future pandemics and seasonal flu outbreaks because it's focusing on host immunity,
and totally redesigned its core to repurpose its infectious capabilities into a safe vehicle for delivering vaccines
they would hang vaccine tags on the spikes. If on the other hand, they wanted the capsid to deliver medicines to a sick cell,
#New approach toward a broad spectrum malaria vaccine Malaria affects millions of people worldwide. Plasmodium falciparum enolase participates in parasite invasion of host red blood cells and mosquito midgut epithelium.
A vaccine based on this motif could confer protection against all malaria parasites. In a recent breakthrough to combat malaria, a collaboration of Indian and American scientists have identified a malarial parasite protein that can be used to develop antibodies
The finding points towards developing a powerful malaria vaccine in the hope of eradicating this debilitating and often fatal disease.
Development of an antimalarial vaccine is an integral part of an effort to counter the socioeconomic burden of malaria.
and this conjugated system was used to vaccinate mice. Interestingly, a subsequent challenge with a lethal strain of mouse malaria parasite in these vaccinated animals showed considerable protection against malaria.
Says Prof. Dassarma, Phd, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the school,"GVNPS offer a designer platform for vaccines
and this work is a significant step forward towards a new malaria vaccine.""This study is a significant advance in the field,
since most other vaccine candidate molecules tested so far confer protection against only a single species of parasite, due to the species and strain specific nature of these molecules."
"The small segment of five amino acids that forms a protective epitope is present in all human malaria causing species of Plasmodium and hence,
Efforts are focused now at developing this into an effective vaccine against malaria a
#Turning up the heat: Holey metamaterials enhance thermal energy harvesting It's estimated that the U s. fails to use more than half of the energy it generates--mostly
Besides the possibility of treatment, the study also raises hopes for an HIV vaccine. If researchers can induce an uninfected person immune system to generate potent antibodies such as 3bnc117
and could ultimately lead to the design of a vaccine to prevent transmission of the virus. This innovative approach could also be part of the solution for one day eradicating the virus. Despite recent advances,
For decades, scientists have been trying to devise a vaccine to block HIV infection, which causes AIDS.
The discovery by Finzi team could help develop a two-part vaccine to prevent HIV infection:
#Ebola Vaccine Demonstrates 100%Protection in Latest African Trial According to an unusual new study, published last week in the world most prestigious medical journal Lancet, the deadly outbreak
might finally come to an end a vaccine, developed by the Public health Agency of Canada and manufactured by the American pharmaceutical company Merck Sharp & Dome, was shown just to confer 100%protection against the disease,
who wasn involved in the study. e will teach about this in public health schools. he vaccine,
the researchers opted for a design called ring vaccination, whereby only the contacts, and the contactscontacts, of new Ebola patients were vaccinated.
This type of approach has never been used in a formal vaccine study ever before. The rings, also called clusters, were randomized such that 48 of them received the vaccine right after a new Ebola case sprung up in their community,
while the other 42 received a shot only three weeks afterwards. Of the 2, 380 people who were assigned to the latter group,
16 got infected. In the second group consisting of 2 014 people the count of new Ebola cases was zero,
The Director-General of THE WHO Margaret Chan called for further studies to clear up any lingering doubts about the vaccine efficacy,
#Could flu someday be prevented without a vaccine? Researchers have discovered a way to trigger a preventive response to a flu infection without any help from the usual players the virus itself or interferon, a powerful infection fighter.
but prevent infection altogether. he flu vaccine needs to change every year because the virus is constantly mutating.
but the scientistslong-term goal is to develop a vaccine-independent method to prevent flu infections. f we were to have an outbreak of some pandemic influenza virus similar to
Secondly, these new findings may be very helpful developing vaccines with more effective adjuvants. Adjuvants are used compounds in vaccines that activate innate immunity they are necessary ingredient of efficient vaccines.
For a long time scientists thought that the effect of adjuvant can be maintained a several days only. But this new research shows that it is not necessarily true.
which would make for much more effective vaccines. As much as human immune system still remains not completely clear for science
Knowing how to form these memories may hide the key to creating better, more effective and long-lasting vaccines a
lack of link to autism New research finds no evidence that thimerosal-containing vaccines cause negative behaviors or result in neuropathology in infant primates,
In the study, infant rhesus macaques received several pediatric vaccines containing thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative,
Other animals received just the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, which does not contain thimerosal,
or an expanded vaccine schedule similar to that recommended for U s. infants today. Control animals received a saline injection.
Regardless of vaccination status all animals developed normal social behaviors; the administration of vaccines to rhesus macaques did not result in neuropathological abnormalities or aberrant behaviors such as those often observed in autism.
Cellular analysis of the cerebellum, amygdala and hippocampus three brain regions known to be altered in autism was vaccinated similar in
and unvaccinated animals. his comprehensive study included many physiological measures and behavioral measures. Fundamentally the vaccines had no ill effects,
said Gene Sackett, UW professor emeritus of psychology and director of the lab work at the Washington National Primate Research center. o the extent that macaques mirror human physiology,
These vaccines are safe. n
#New technology enables people to take own blood samples at home A world-first prototype for taking accurate blood samples at home has been developed by a Tasmanian-led research partnership.
or to the sperm gives you opportunities to create small-molecule drugs for female and male contraception, contraceptive vaccines,
including new vaccines. It might be possible, for instance, to make a tuberculosis virus with unnatural DNA in it.
but also benign, that would be the perfect vaccine, says Schultz. Synthetic life forms have implications far beyond new products.
And once synthetic biology leads to a new drug or vaccine, he thinks, wel get used to the idea of inventing life for our own good. ne has to pick the most near-term applications of this technology to show what it can really do for the good of mankind,
and Vaccine Production Facility with a gene transfer technique that teaches the T cells to target
which are thought to provide long-term vaccine-like activity preventing tumor recurrence. Since B cells play a role in helping fight infection patients typically receive immunoglobulin replacement to maintain healthy immune function.
The structural knowledge may help others engineer small molecules that inhibit DNA replication at specific moments leading to new disease prevention
#Defective gene renders diarrhea vaccine ineffective Acute diarrheal illnesses cause nearly one-fifth of all child deaths in developing countries.
Today vaccination is considered the most important method for reducing mortality. Unfortunately several studies have shown that the two available living vaccines Rotarix and Rotateq
which are recommended by bodies including the World health organization are not sufficiently effective in developing countries. In many African countries protection has been as low as 20-50%.
%The current study to be published in the Journal of Clinical Infectious diseases by Johan Nordgren from Professor Lennart Svensson's research group shows that up to four of ten children in Burkina faso are genetically resistant to the virus strains found in the vaccines.
The researchers found that children who can not express a particular sugar molecule in the small intestine called the Lewis molecule do not become infected by the rotavirus types found in existing vaccines.
This means that these children do not get the desired immunological protection from the vaccine.
and can greatly impact the evaluation of the rotavirus vaccines now being introduced in several developing countries.
The results could lead to a review of the vaccine composition and the development of vaccines better suited to the populations most affected by rotavirus.
Story Source: The above story is provided based on materials by Linköping University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
and why it is challenging for researchers to develop vaccines targeting the HIV envelope proteins,
Dry powder inhaler formulation Despite advances in vaccination and antimicrobial therapy, community-acquired pneumonia remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, even in highly developed countries.
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