DNA vaccines for bacterial infections
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Immunology & Cell Biology
- Vol. 75 (4) , 364-369
- https://doi.org/10.1038/icb.1997.57
Abstract
DNA vaccines are an exciting development in vaccine technology which may have a special role in preventing viral infections and as ‘theracines’ for cancer. Their use in preventing bacterial infections has, by comparison, been less well documented. While it is unlikely that traditional, highly successful and cheap vaccines for diseases such as diphtheria will be replaced by DNA vaccines, naked DNA may be particularly appropriate for preventing bacterial infections where cytotoxic T cells confer protection, or where a Thl type T cell response mediates resistance. For example, DNA vaccines containing different mycobacterial antigens have been shown to inhibit overt infections by Mycobacterium tuberculosis in rodent models. The use of DNA vaccines in bacterial infections may be complicated by fundamental differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic genes and gene products, including mRNA stability, codon bias, secondary structures surrounding native start sequences and glycosylation. These problems can be solved by re‐synthesis of bacterial genes to produce ‘new’ sequences which are more highly expressed by eukaryotic cells.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- An OspA-Based DNA Vaccine Protects Mice against Infection with Borrelia burgdorferiThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Vaccination against tuberculosis by DNA injectionNature Medicine, 1996
- Protection against mycoplasma infection using expression-library immunizationNature, 1995
- Immunity to intracellular microbial pathogensImmunology Today, 1995
- Global Aspects of VaccinationInternational Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1995
- Towards a DNA vaccine against tuberculosisVaccine, 1994
- Demonstration of Delayed Hypersensitivity in Chlamydia trachomatis Salpingitis in Monkeys: A Pathogenic Mechanism of Tubal DamageThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1994
- Pilus and nonpilus bacterial adhesins: Assembly and function in cell recognitionCell, 1993
- Precise prediction of a dominant class I MHC-restricted epitope of Listeria monocytogenesNature, 1991
- Introduction of soluble protein into the class I pathway of antigen processing and presentationCell, 1988