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. 2002 Jan 15;20(7-8):1058-67.
doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(01)00446-7.

Dengue type 2 virus subviral extracellular particles produced by a stably transfected mammalian cell line and their evaluation for a subunit vaccine

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Dengue type 2 virus subviral extracellular particles produced by a stably transfected mammalian cell line and their evaluation for a subunit vaccine

Eiji Konishi et al. Vaccine. .

Abstract

A dengue subunit vaccine candidate was developed using a mammalian cell line continuously expressing subviral extracellular particles (EPs) of the New Guinea C (NGC) strain of dengue type 2 virus. The cell line, designated D cell line, maintained envelope (E) antigen production for at least 10 passages. The EPs contained an E protein biochemically and antigenically equivalent to authentic E produced by NGC-infected Vero cells. Two immunizations of BALB/c mice with purified EPs containing 100ng or 400ng of E induced moderate levels of neutralizing antibody and anamnestic neutralizing antibody responses were produced when these animals were challenged with dengue virus. The yield of E antigen from D cells was comparable to that from NGC-infected Vero cells. When D cells were transfected with the anti-apoptotic bcl-2 gene, the E antigen release increased approximately two-fold. These results indicate that D cell EPs are a promising non-infectious vaccine antigen for dengue.

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