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Plant-based anti-HIV-1 strategies: vaccine molecules and antiviral approaches

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy has drastically changed HIV infection from an acute, very deadly, to a chronic, long-lasting, mild disease. However, this requires continuous care management, which is difficult to implement worldwide, especially in developing countries. Sky-rocketing costs of HIV-positive subjects and the limited success of preventive recommendations mean that a vaccine is urgently needed, which could be the only effective strategy for the real control of the AIDS pandemic. To be effective, vaccination will need to be accessible, affordable and directed against multiple antigens. Plant-based vaccines, which are easy to produce and administer, and require no cold chain for their heat stability are, in principle, suited to such a strategy. More recently, it has been shown that even highly immunogenic, enveloped plant-based vaccines can be produced at a competitive and more efficient rate than conventional strategies. The high variability of HIV epitopes and the need to stimulate both humoral neutralizing antibodies and cellular immunity suggest the importance of using the plant system: it offers a wide range of possible strategies, from single-epitope to multicomponent vaccines, modulators of the immune response (adjuvants) and preventive molecules (microbicides), either alone or in association with plant-derived monoclonal antibodies, besides the potential use of the latter as therapeutic agents. Furthermore, plant-based anti-HIV strategies can be administered not only parenterally but also by the more convenient and safer oral route, which is a more suitable approach for possible mass vaccination.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
HIV; plant-based pharmaceutical; protein accumulation; recombinant protein; transgenic plant
List of contributors:
Scotti, Nunzia; Cardi, Teodoro
Authors of the University:
CARDI TEODORO
SCOTTI NUNZIA
Handle:
https://iris.cnr.it/handle/20.500.14243/28255
Published in:
EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES
Journal
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