نتایج جستجو برای: intranasal vaccination

تعداد نتایج: 67825  

2016
Khamis Tomusange Danushka Wijesundara Jason Gummow Steve Wesselingh Andreas Suhrbier Eric J. Gowans Branka Grubor-Bauk

Mucosal immunity is deemed crucial to control sexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Herein we report the efficacy of a mucosal HIV vaccine strategy comprising intranasal (IN) vaccination with a cocktail of live recombinant human rhinoviruses (HRVs) encoding overlapping fragments of HIV Gag and full length Tat (rHRV-Gag/Tat) followed by intradermal (ID) vaccination with DNA ...

1997
Steve A. Sornsen

SAS: Iowa Select Farms, Iowa Falls, Iowa 50126, e-mail: [email protected]; JJZ: Iowa State University; DDP, MBR: NOBL Laboratories orcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) causes production and financial losses in swine herds worldwide.1–3 Several researchers have reported that PRRS virus (PRRSV) infection may have an adverse effect on nursery performance.4,5 Kerkaert, et al.,...

Journal: :The Journal of general virology 1995
C P Muller P Beauverger F Schneider G Jung N H Brons

An efficient mucosal vaccination has a number of obvious advantages over invasive routes of immunization. The immune response to measles virus (MV) was investigated after intranasal and intragastric co-immunization of mice with cholera toxin B (CTB) as an adjuvant. High titres of virus-specific IgG antibodies and a transient IgA response were detected in the sera after intranasal but not after ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2010
O K Giddings C S Eickhoff N L Sullivan D F Hoft

Trypanosoma cruzi is an intracellular protozoan parasite capable of infecting through mucosal surfaces. Our laboratory has previously elucidated the anatomical routes of infection after both conjunctival and gastric challenge in mice. We have shown that chronically infected mice develop strong immune responses capable of protecting against subsequent rechallenge with virulent parasites through ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2004
Xin Li C Virginia Lockatell David E Johnson M Chelsea Lane John W Warren Harry L T Mobley

Proteus mirabilis commonly infects the complicated urinary tract and is associated with urolithiasis. Stone formation is caused by bacterial urease, which hydrolyzes urea to ammonia, causing local pH to rise, and leads to the subsequent precipitation of magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite) and calcium phosphate (apatite) crystals. To prevent these infections, we vaccinated CBA mice with form...

Journal: :Journal of Immunology 2023

Abstract Development of effective SARS-CoV-2 vaccines to induce potent and long-lasting immunity provide cross-reactive protection against emerging variants remains a high priority. We recently reported live-attenuated vaccine candidate with re-engineered viral transcription regulator sequences deleted open-reading-frames (ORF) 3, 6, 7, 8 (Δ3678) is highly attenuated in mice hamsters vaccinatio...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2001
R Malley M Lipsitch A Stack R Saladino G Fleisher S Pelton C Thompson D Briles P Anderson

A whole-cell killed unencapsulated pneumococcal vaccine given by the intranasal route with cholera toxin as an adjuvant was tested in two animal models. This vaccination was highly effective in preventing nasopharyngeal colonization with an encapsulated serotype 6B strain in mice and also conferred protection against illness and death in rats inoculated intrathoracically with a highly encapsula...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1999
A Roberts L Buonocore R Price J Forman J K Rose

We showed previously that a single intranasal vaccination of mice with a recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) expressing an influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) protein provided complete protection from lethal challenge with influenza virus (A. Roberts, E. Kretzschmar, A. S. Perkins, J. Forman, R. Price, L. Buonocore, Y. Kawaoka, and J. K. Rose, J. Virol. 72:4704-4711, 1998). Because some...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2004
J McArthur E Medina A Mueller J Chin B J Currie K S Sriprakash S R Talay G S Chhatwal M J Walker

Fibronectin binding protein F1 (Sfb1) of Streptococcus pyogenes (group A streptococcus [GAS]) is a well-characterized adhesin that has been shown to induce protection in mice against a lethal intranasal GAS challenge after intranasal immunization with cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) as adjuvant. With a murine skin infection model, we have shown that Sfb1/CTB vaccination neither elicits opsonizing...

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