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      Protective immunity induced by rotavirus DNA vaccines.

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          Abstract

          It is estimated that Group A rotavirus diarrhea causes as many as one million deaths per year in children worldwide, and effective vaccines will be essential for their control. Plasmid DNA vaccines encoding murine rotaviral proteins VP4, VP6, or VP7 were tested in adult BALB/c mice for their ability to induce immune responses and provide protection against rotavirus challenge. The vaccines were administered by inoculation into cells of the epidermis with an Accell gene gun. (Auragen, Inc., Middleton, WI, USA). Each vaccine elicited rotavirus-specific serum antibodies as measured by ELISA. Virus neutralizing antibodies were detected in mice receiving plasmid DNAs encoding for outer capsid proteins VP4 and VP7, but not for VP6, an inner capsid protein, and all of the vaccines generated virus-specific CTL responses. Each vaccine was effective in protecting mice against infection after homotypic rotavirus (100 ID50) challenge, showing reductions (P < 0.0002) in viral excretion measured over a 9 day period. Increased rotavirus-specific intestinal IgA antibodies were seen in vaccinated mice after rotavirus challenge, particularly in mice that received the VP6 DNA vaccine. This suggests that intracellular IgA-mediated neutralization may be involved in protective immunity induced by the VP6 DNA vaccine, and may represent a new mechanism for protection by DNA vaccines.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Vaccine
          Vaccine
          0264-410X
          0264-410X
          Jun 1997
          : 15
          : 8
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester 01655, USA.
          Article
          S0264-410X(96)00272-1
          9234543
          d2f97245-4aee-4a06-9bd3-e759e169ea91
          History

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