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Vaccine Detail
L. amazonensis M2 protein vaccine |
Vaccine Information |
- Vaccine Name: L. amazonensis M2 protein vaccine
- Target Pathogen: Leishmania amazonensis
- Target Disease: Leishmaniasis
- Vaccine Ontology ID: VO_0011355
- Type: Subunit vaccine
- Status: Research
- Host Species as Laboratory Animal Model: mouse
- Antigen: L. amazonensis M2
- M2
gene engineering:
- Type: Recombinant protein preparation
- Description: M-2, a 46-kDa promastigote-specific glycoprotein was isolated. The protein was further purified by removal of detergent with an anionexchange column(Champsi and McMahon-Pratt, 1988).
- Detailed Gene Information: Click Here.
- Adjuvant:
- Immunization Route: Intraperitoneal injection (i.p.)
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Host Response |
Mouse Response
- Host Strain: CBA
- Vaccination Protocol: BALB/c, CBA, and C57BL/6 mice were immunized intraperitoneally with M-2 at a final concentration of 0.03 mg/ml. The amount of C. parvum used in immunizations 2 and 3 was reduced to 0.05 mg per immunization (Champsi and McMahon-Pratt, 1988).
- Challenge Protocol: Animals were rested for 2 to 4 weeks after final immunization and challenged in the right hindfoot with late-log-phase promastigotes. Parasites used for infections were passaged a maximum of four times. Challenge doses of 10^3, 10^4, 10^5, and 10^6 were used (Champsi and McMahon-Pratt, 1988).
- Efficacy: Immunization of CBA mice with the M-2 glycoprotein of L. amazonensis and C. parvum adjuvant resulted in complete protection against a challenge infection of 10^4 and 10^6 late log-phase promastigotes of L. amazonensis. In the BALB/c strain, complete protection was observed in some of the immunized animals (28 to 50%); in the rest of the mice the onset of infection was significantly delayed. Protective immunity for C57BL/6 mice was observed only at the low infecting dose (10(4) L. amazonensis organisms) (Champsi and McMahon-Pratt, 1988).
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References |
Champsi and McMahon-Pratt, 1988: Champsi J, McMahon-Pratt D. Membrane glycoprotein M-2 protects against Leishmania amazonensis infection. Infection and immunity. 1988; 56(12); 3272-3279. [PubMed: 3182080].
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