Recombinant and epitope-based vaccines on the road to the market and implications for vaccine design and production.

Hum Vaccin Immunother

b School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, Institute for Molecular Bioscience and Australian Infectious Diseases Research Center, University of Queensland, Brisbane , Australia.

Published: March 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Novel vaccination strategies using epitope-based vaccines are progressing in clinical trials, with RTS,S showing promise as a potential first vaccine against a human parasitic disease.
  • Advances in recombinant DNA technology and immunoinformatics are facilitating the efficient production of synthetic proteins that include both B- and T-cell epitopes, enhancing immune response.
  • Ongoing research is focusing on designing vaccines that account for genetic variations in pathogens and improving population coverage based on HLA protein specificity, though practical applications in humans are still in development.

Article Abstract

Novel vaccination approaches based on rational design of B- and T-cell epitopes - epitope-based vaccines - are making progress in the clinical trial pipeline. The epitope-focused recombinant protein-based malaria vaccine (termed RTS,S) is a next-generation approach that successfully reached phase-III trials, and will potentially become the first commercial vaccine against a human parasitic disease. Progress made on methods such as recombinant DNA technology, advanced cell-culture techniques, immunoinformatics and rational design of immunogens are driving the development of these novel concepts. Synthetic recombinant proteins comprising both B- and T-cell epitopes can be efficiently produced through modern biotechnology and bioprocessing methods, and can enable the induction of large repertoires of immune specificities. In particular, the inclusion of appropriate CD4+ T-cell epitopes is increasingly considered a key vaccine component to elicit robust immune responses, as suggested by results coming from HIV-1 clinical trials. In silico strategies for vaccine design are under active development to address genetic variation in pathogens and several broadly protective "universal" influenza and HIV-1 vaccines are currently at different stages of clinical trials. Other methods focus on improving population coverage in target populations by rationally considering specificity and prevalence of the HLA proteins, though a proof-of-concept in humans has not been demonstrated yet. Overall, we expect immunoinformatics and bioprocessing methods to become a central part of the next-generation epitope-based vaccine development and production process.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4964635PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2015.1094595DOI Listing

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