نتایج جستجو برای: vaccine escape mutations

تعداد نتایج: 308143  

Journal: :Revue scientifique et technique 2007
K A Schat E Baranowski

Despite reducing disease, vaccination rarely protects against infection and many pathogens persist within vaccinated animal populations. Circulation of viral pathogens within vaccinated populations may favour the development of vaccine resistance with implications for the evolution of virus pathogenicity and the emergence of variant viruses. The high rate of mutations during replication of ribo...

Journal: :Nature Medicine 2021

SARS-CoV-2 can escape natural immune responses, but the virus evade monoclonal antibodies and vaccine-mediated immunity?

Journal: :Journal of virology 2009
Christian L Boutwell Christopher F Rowley M Essex

Cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte (CTL) escape mutations in human immunodeficiency viruses encode amino acid substitutions in positions that disrupt CTL targeting, thereby increasing virus survival and conferring a relative fitness benefit. However, it is now clear that CTL escape mutations can also confer a fitness cost, and there is increasing evidence to suggest that in some cases, e.g., escape from HL...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2012
Steven A Rubin Malen A Link Christian J Sauder Cheryl Zhang Laurie Ngo Bert K Rima W Paul Duprex

Recently, numerous large-scale mumps outbreaks have occurred in vaccinated populations. Clinical isolates sequenced from these outbreaks have invariably been of genotypes distinct from those of vaccine viruses, raising concern that certain mumps virus strains may escape vaccine-induced immunity. To investigate this concern, sera obtained from children 6 weeks after receipt of measles, mumps, an...

Journal: :Journal of Immunology 2023

Abstract COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2 variants continue to threaten human health life worldwide. Thousands of structures related have been rapidly determined, either by X-ray crystallography or CryoEM deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) since 2020. Here, we systematically investigated 302 antibodies 78 nanobodies complex with spike protein receptor binding domain (RBD) SARS-CoV-2. We identified...

2011
Gagan A. Pandya M. Catherine McEllistrem Pratap Venepally Michael H. Holmes Behnam Jarrahi Ravi Sanka Jia Liu Svetlana A. Karamycheva Yun Bai Robert D. Fleischmann Scott N. Peterson

BACKGROUND While the pneumococcal protein conjugate vaccines reduce the incidence in invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD), serotype replacement remains a major concern. Thus, serotype-independent protection with vaccines targeting virulence genes, such as PspA, have been pursued. PspA is comprised of diverse clades that arose through recombination. Therefore, multi-locus sequence typing (MLST)-d...

Journal: :Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America 1998
S L Ngui N J Andrews G S Underhill J Heptonstall C G Teo

A retrospective case-control study was conducted to determine why some infants born full-term without obstetric intervention to hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)-seropositive mothers become infected by hepatitis B virus (HBV) despite having received passive-active immunoprophylaxis. Cases and controls comprised 12 hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)-seropositive infants and 22 HBsAg-seronegative in...

Journal: :Antiviral therapy 2005
Mina John Corey B Moore Ian R James Simon A Mallal

HIV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses mediated by human leukocyte antigen (HLA) recognition and antiretroviral drugs exert selection pressure on HIV-1 in vivo. The selection of CTL escape mutations strongly underpins the failure of CTL control in most untreated infections whilst drug-resistance mutations predict failure of drug control. These two evolutionary forces share common t...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Xian-Chun Tang Sudhakar S Agnihothram Yongjun Jiao Jeremy Stanhope Rachel L Graham Eric C Peterson Yuval Avnir Aimee St Clair Tallarico Jared Sheehan Quan Zhu Ralph S Baric Wayne A Marasco

The newly emerging Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes a Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-like disease with ∼43% mortality. Given the recent detection of virus in dromedary camels, zoonotic transfer of MERS-CoV to humans is suspected. In addition, little is known about the role of human neutralizing Ab (nAb) pressure as a driving force in MERS-CoV adaptive evolution....

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