AsiaIPEX is a one-stop-shop for players in the IP industry, facilitating IP trade and connection to the IP world. Whether you are a patent owner interested in selling your IP, or a manufacturer looking to buy technologies to upgrade your operation, you will find the portal a useful resource.

Vaccines That Rapidly Induce Anti-Viral Immunity

Technology Application
The manufacture of a new class of vaccines against recalcitrant virusesVaccines that confer rapid immunity over days rather than weeks
Detailed Technology Description
None
Application No.
20170028051
Others

Background

There are at least three challenges to developing vaccines. First, vaccines confer protection against infectious agents, by relying on adaptive immunity.  The adaptive immune system, however, takes more than a week to develop a robust response.  Second, vaccines are difficult to engineer because of the ever changing mutations in infectious agents.  Third, some vaccines are not available for some viruses despite decades of research.

One of the challenges of increased globalization is the emergence of new infectious agents. Because of increased globalization and access to rural areas, the emergence of new pathogens is quickly increasing and new strategies are desperately needed to accelerate vaccine development and availability.


Tech ID/UC Case

24414/2013-522-0


Related Cases

2013-522-0

*Abstract

Prof. Shou-wei Ding and his colleagues at UCR have  discovered that administering an attenuated virus lacking its functional viral suppressor of RNA interference (“VSR”) rapidly and completely protected newborn and adult mice from infection by the wild type virus upon subsequent infection.

The UCR researchers tested a Nodamura virus (“NoV”) modified without expressing its functional VSR protein, B2 (NoVΔB2).  The modified virus, NoVΔB2, was administered to 6 day old suckling BALB/c mice.  Two days later, these mice were injected with a lethal dose of wild-type (WT) NoV. While injection of WT NoV is lethal to 7-day old suckling mice, all of the mice inoculated with NoVΔB2 vaccine remained healthy and survived.

Vaccination with NoVΔB2 also induced full protection in newborn and adult Rag1-/- mice that lack an adaptive immune system.

shouwei

Fig: 1 shows that the modified Nodamura virus lacking its VSR (NoVΔB2) administered at three different doses conferred full protection to Rag1-/- suckling mice while the mice did not survive after vaccination with NoVmA, a mutant Nodamura virus attenuated by multiple mutations to weaken its replication.

*IP Issue Date
Feb 2, 2017
*Principal Investigator

Name: Shou Wei Ding

Department:


Name: Yang Li

Department:

Country/Region
USA

For more information, please click Here
Mobile Device