Introduction: Among the types of cancer affecting women, cervical cancer (CC) is a public health problem with high global incidence and mortality rates. It is currently classified into three main histological types: squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), adenocarcinoma (AC), and adenosquamous (ASC) carcinoma. All of them lack a targeted therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cost and supply constraints are key challenges in the use of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV). Dose reduction through adsorption to aluminium hydroxide (Al) is a promising option, and establishing its effectiveness in the target population is a crucial milestone in developing IPV-Al. The aim of this clinical trial was to show the non-inferiority of three IPV-Al vaccines to standard IPV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBluetongue virus (BTV) is an economically important Orbivirus of the Reoviridae family that causes a hemorrhagic disease in ruminants. Its control has been achieved by inactivated-vaccines that have proven to protect against homologous BTV challenge although unable to induce long-term immunity. Therefore, a more efficient control strategy needs to be developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTaiep rat has a failure in myelination and remyelination processes leading to a state of hypomyelination throughout its life. Chemokines, which are known to play a role in inflammation, are also involved in the remyelination process. We aimed to demonstrate that remyelination-stimulating factors are altered in the brainstem of 1- and 6-month-old taiep rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeste des petits ruminants (PPR) is a highly contagious disease of small ruminants caused by the Morbillivirus peste des petits ruminants virus (PPRV). Two recombinant replication-defective human adenoviruses serotype 5 (Ad5) expressing either the highly immunogenic fusion protein (F) or hemagglutinin protein (H) from PPRV were used to vaccinate sheep by intramuscular inoculation. Both recombinant adenovirus vaccines elicited PPRV-specific B- and T-cell responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBluetongue virus (BTV) is a non-enveloped dsRNA virus that causes a haemorrhagic disease mainly in sheep. It is an economically important Orbivirus of the Reoviridae family. In order to estimate the importance of T cell responses during BTV infection, it is essential to identify the epitopes targeted by the immune system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransmission of excreted vaccine-derived infectious virus from vaccinated to unvaccinated individuals is possible within close contacts. This randomized (1:1), double-blind study evaluated the potential for transmission of human rotavirus vaccine strain, HRV (Rotarix™) from vaccine recipients to unvaccinated close contacts (twins). 100 pairs of healthy twins aged 6-14 weeks at the time of Dose 1 of HRV vaccine/placebo were enrolled and one randomly selected twin from each pair received two vaccine doses and the other received placebo doses (at 2 and 4 months of age).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBluetongue virus (BTV), an economically important orbivirus of the Reoviridae family, is a non-enveloped, dsRNA virus that causes a haemorrhagic disease mainly in sheep, but little is known of the cellular immunity elicited against BTV. We observed that vaccination of interferon type I-deficient mice (IFNAR((-/-))), or inoculation of the wild type C57BL/6 strain with BTV-8, induced a strong T cell response. Therefore, we proceeded to identify some of the T cell epitopes targeted by the immune system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIdentification of gene mutations in Mendelian disorders is often determined by linkage analysis and positional cloning, an approach that is difficult for fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) due to a low reproductive fitness that results in a small number of multigenerational families showing inheritance of the disease. Altered signaling pathways can be investigated as a complementary method to identify the consequences of the mutated gene responsible for FOP and to identify potential therapeutic targets. Candidate signaling pathways for FOP are those that malfunctioning could account for the malformation of the great toes during embryonic development and could explain the postnatal progressive heterotopic endochondral ossification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: FOP is a disabling disorder in which skeletal muscle is progressively replaced with bone. Lymphocytes, our model system for examining BMP signaling, cannot signal through the canonical Smad pathway unless exogenous Smad1 is supplied, providing a unique cell type in which the BMP-p38 MAPK pathway can be examined. FOP lymphocytes exhibit defects in the BMP-p38 MAPK pathway, suggesting that altered BMP signaling underlies ectopic bone formation in this disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: FOP is a disorder in which skeletal muscle is progressively replaced with bone. FOP lymphocytes, a model system for exploring the BMP pathway in these patients, exhibit a defect in BMPRIA internalization and increased activation of downstream signaling, suggesting that altered BMP receptor trafficking underlies ectopic bone formation in this disease.
Introduction: Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a severely disabling disorder characterized by progressive heterotopic ossification of connective tissues.