Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines

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Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines. / Draper, Simon J; Angov, Evelina; Horii, Toshihiro; Miller, Louis H; Srinivasan, Prakash; Theisen, Michael; Biswas, Sumi.

In: Vaccine, Vol. 33, No. 52, 22.12.2015, p. 7433-43.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Draper, SJ, Angov, E, Horii, T, Miller, LH, Srinivasan, P, Theisen, M & Biswas, S 2015, 'Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines', Vaccine, vol. 33, no. 52, pp. 7433-43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093

APA

Draper, S. J., Angov, E., Horii, T., Miller, L. H., Srinivasan, P., Theisen, M., & Biswas, S. (2015). Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines. Vaccine, 33(52), 7433-43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093

Vancouver

Draper SJ, Angov E, Horii T, Miller LH, Srinivasan P, Theisen M et al. Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines. Vaccine. 2015 Dec 22;33(52):7433-43. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093

Author

Draper, Simon J ; Angov, Evelina ; Horii, Toshihiro ; Miller, Louis H ; Srinivasan, Prakash ; Theisen, Michael ; Biswas, Sumi. / Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines. In: Vaccine. 2015 ; Vol. 33, No. 52. pp. 7433-43.

Bibtex

@article{8e3c144111214fd7866787df67478529,
title = "Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines",
abstract = "Plasmodium parasites are the causative agent of human malaria, and the development of a highly effective vaccine against infection, disease and transmission remains a key priority. It is widely established that multiple stages of the parasite's complex lifecycle within the human host and mosquito vector are susceptible to vaccine-induced antibodies. The mainstay approach to antibody induction by subunit vaccination has been the delivery of protein antigen formulated in adjuvant. Extensive efforts have been made in this endeavor with respect to malaria vaccine development, especially with regard to target antigen discovery, protein expression platforms, adjuvant testing, and development of soluble and virus-like particle (VLP) delivery platforms. The breadth of approaches to protein-based vaccines is continuing to expand as innovative new concepts in next-generation subunit design are explored, with the prospects for the development of a highly effective multi-component/multi-stage/multi-antigen formulation seeming ever more likely. This review will focus on recent progress in protein vaccine design, development and/or clinical testing for a number of leading malaria antigens from the sporozoite-, merozoite- and sexual-stages of the parasite's lifecycle-including PfCelTOS, PfMSP1, PfAMA1, PfRH5, PfSERA5, PfGLURP, PfMSP3, Pfs48/45 and Pfs25. Future prospects and challenges for the development, production, human delivery and assessment of protein-based malaria vaccines are discussed.",
author = "Draper, {Simon J} and Evelina Angov and Toshihiro Horii and Miller, {Louis H} and Prakash Srinivasan and Michael Theisen and Sumi Biswas",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2015",
month = dec,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "7433--43",
journal = "Vaccine",
issn = "0264-410X",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "52",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recent advances in recombinant protein-based malaria vaccines

AU - Draper, Simon J

AU - Angov, Evelina

AU - Horii, Toshihiro

AU - Miller, Louis H

AU - Srinivasan, Prakash

AU - Theisen, Michael

AU - Biswas, Sumi

N1 - Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2015/12/22

Y1 - 2015/12/22

N2 - Plasmodium parasites are the causative agent of human malaria, and the development of a highly effective vaccine against infection, disease and transmission remains a key priority. It is widely established that multiple stages of the parasite's complex lifecycle within the human host and mosquito vector are susceptible to vaccine-induced antibodies. The mainstay approach to antibody induction by subunit vaccination has been the delivery of protein antigen formulated in adjuvant. Extensive efforts have been made in this endeavor with respect to malaria vaccine development, especially with regard to target antigen discovery, protein expression platforms, adjuvant testing, and development of soluble and virus-like particle (VLP) delivery platforms. The breadth of approaches to protein-based vaccines is continuing to expand as innovative new concepts in next-generation subunit design are explored, with the prospects for the development of a highly effective multi-component/multi-stage/multi-antigen formulation seeming ever more likely. This review will focus on recent progress in protein vaccine design, development and/or clinical testing for a number of leading malaria antigens from the sporozoite-, merozoite- and sexual-stages of the parasite's lifecycle-including PfCelTOS, PfMSP1, PfAMA1, PfRH5, PfSERA5, PfGLURP, PfMSP3, Pfs48/45 and Pfs25. Future prospects and challenges for the development, production, human delivery and assessment of protein-based malaria vaccines are discussed.

AB - Plasmodium parasites are the causative agent of human malaria, and the development of a highly effective vaccine against infection, disease and transmission remains a key priority. It is widely established that multiple stages of the parasite's complex lifecycle within the human host and mosquito vector are susceptible to vaccine-induced antibodies. The mainstay approach to antibody induction by subunit vaccination has been the delivery of protein antigen formulated in adjuvant. Extensive efforts have been made in this endeavor with respect to malaria vaccine development, especially with regard to target antigen discovery, protein expression platforms, adjuvant testing, and development of soluble and virus-like particle (VLP) delivery platforms. The breadth of approaches to protein-based vaccines is continuing to expand as innovative new concepts in next-generation subunit design are explored, with the prospects for the development of a highly effective multi-component/multi-stage/multi-antigen formulation seeming ever more likely. This review will focus on recent progress in protein vaccine design, development and/or clinical testing for a number of leading malaria antigens from the sporozoite-, merozoite- and sexual-stages of the parasite's lifecycle-including PfCelTOS, PfMSP1, PfAMA1, PfRH5, PfSERA5, PfGLURP, PfMSP3, Pfs48/45 and Pfs25. Future prospects and challenges for the development, production, human delivery and assessment of protein-based malaria vaccines are discussed.

U2 - 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093

DO - 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.09.093

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26458807

VL - 33

SP - 7433

EP - 7443

JO - Vaccine

JF - Vaccine

SN - 0264-410X

IS - 52

ER -

ID: 152662960