Viral vector- and virus-like particle-based vaccines against infectious diseases: A minireview
Ruth Henríquez, Isabel Muñoz‐Barroso
Abstract
. Also, the first viral vector vaccine licensed for human vaccination was the Japanese encephalitis virus vaccine. Since then, several viral vectors have been approved for vaccination against the viruses of Lassa fever, Ebola, hepatitis B, hepatitis E, SARS-CoV-2, and malaria. VLPs are nanoparticles that mimic viral particles formed from the self-assembly of structural proteins and VLP-based vaccines against hepatitis B and E viruses, human papillomavirus, and malaria have been commercialized. As evidenced by the accelerated production of vaccines against COVID-19, these new approaches are important tools for vaccinology and for generating rapid responses against pathogens and emerging pandemic threats.
Topics & Concepts
VirologyVirus-like particleLassa feverBiologyVaccinationViral vectorLassa virusVirusVector (molecular biology)Yellow feverRecombinant DNAGeneBiochemistryVirology and Viral DiseasesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchAnimal Virus Infections Studies