News and Research
Immune System
DNA Vaccine Protects Against Anthrax
3-9-2004
BALTIMORE, MD A new DNA vaccine against anthrax provides
complete protection against aerosolized spores in rabbits,
say researchers from the Ohio University and the Naval Medical
Research Center. They report their results today at the
American Society for Microbiology's Biodefense Research
Meeting.
"The
naked DNA approach is vaccination at its simplest. The gene
encoding the vaccine is introduced into the host and expressed
in vivo where it stimulates a protective immune response,"
says Matthew Bell, of the Ohio State University, one of
the researchers on the study.
Having
previously shown the effectiveness of a DNA vaccine in mice,
Bell and his colleagues tested the vaccine on a higher form
of mammal: rabbits. The animals were given a vaccine made
of DNA that coded for either the lethal factor (LF) or the
protective antigen (PA) component of the anthrax toxin in
order to stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies
against those compounds. The researchers tested the ability
of the vaccine to both stimulate antibody production and
protect against lethal infection. While the LF-based DNA
vaccine appeared to stimulate higher levels of antibodies,
only 56% of the rabbits survived an aerosolized spore challenge.
In contrast all of the rabbits given the PA-based DNA vaccine
survived.
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"Although LF stimulates higher antibody titers
than PA, immunization with PA induces antibodies that are more capable
of neutralizing toxin and conferring protection," says Bell.
The American Society for Microbiology (ASM) is the
largest single life science society, composed of over 42,000 scientists,
teachers, physicians, and health professionals. Its mission is to
promote research and training in the microbiological sciences and
to assist communication between scientists, policymakers, and the
public to improve health, economic well being, and the environment.
Further information on the ASM Biodefense Research
Meeting can be found online at www.asmbiodefense.org.
This story has been adapted from a news release issued
by American Society For Microbiology, www.asm.org.
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