Protective efficacy of in vitro synthesized, specific mRNA vaccines against influenza A virus infection
- PMID: 23159882
- DOI: 10.1038/nbt.2436
Protective efficacy of in vitro synthesized, specific mRNA vaccines against influenza A virus infection
Abstract
Despite substantial improvements, influenza vaccine production-and availability-remain suboptimal. Influenza vaccines based on mRNA may offer a solution as sequence-matched, clinical-grade material could be produced reliably and rapidly in a scalable process, allowing quick response to the emergence of pandemic strains. Here we show that mRNA vaccines induce balanced, long-lived and protective immunity to influenza A virus infections in even very young and very old mice and that the vaccine remains protective upon thermal stress. This vaccine format elicits B and T cell-dependent protection and targets multiple antigens, including the highly conserved viral nucleoprotein, indicating its usefulness as a cross-protective vaccine. In ferrets and pigs, mRNA vaccines induce immunological correlates of protection and protective effects similar to those of a licensed influenza vaccine in pigs. Thus, mRNA vaccines could address substantial medical need in the area of influenza prophylaxis and the broader realm of anti-infective vaccinology.
Comment in
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An mRNA vaccine for influenza.Nat Biotechnol. 2012 Dec;30(12):1202-4. doi: 10.1038/nbt.2439. Nat Biotechnol. 2012. PMID: 23222788 No abstract available.
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