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A vaccination strategy against Chlamydia and other sexually transmitted diseases


Technology Benefits

§ By design, only a fragment of the Chlamydia protein is included in the protein fusion so that expression and purification steps are easier, and less expensive than for the whole protein. § Careful choice of the Chlamydia protein fragment, and fusion to the Neisseria protein, vastly increase likelihood of a robust immune response and an effective vaccine.


Detailed Technology Description

In the US alone, over 1 million cases of Chlamydia are reported each year. Increasing prevalence of Multiple-Drug Resistant Chlamydia is rendering antibiotic treatment increasingly ineffective. Furthermore, there is no effective vaccine on the market. Current experimental vaccines against Chlamydia use a complete protein from the pathogen as the vaccine. The properties of this protein include low solubility, low stability, and the need for detergent solubilization during purification – consequently resulting in a relatively ineffective vaccine. The current invention circumvents these problems by using a mix-and-match approach of combining proteins - a specific sub-region from this same Chlamydia protein and the entire protein from a different Neisseria species. This fusion protein has the potential to be a very effective vaccine against Chlamydia


Others

State Of Development

Protocols for recombinant protein expression from an E. coli vector, purification, and vaccine administration in mice are already available in order to establish proof-of-concept for vaccine design.


Related Materials

Cheng, C.; Pal, S.; Tifrea, D.; Jia, Z.; and de la Maza, L. M. Microbes Infect. 2014, 16, 244-52.


Tech ID/UC Case

27382/2017-205-0


Related Cases

2017-205-0


Country/Region

USA

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