Improving T cell-induced response to subunit vaccines:opportunities for a proteomic systems approach


Autoria(s): Dunston, Christopher R.; Herbert, Rebecca; Griffiths, Helen R.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Prophylactic vaccines are an effective strategy to prevent development of many infectious diseases. With new and re-emerging infections posing increasing risks to food stocks and the health of the population in general, there is a need to improve the rationale of vaccine development. One key challenge lies in development of an effective T cell-induced response to subunit vaccines at specific sites and in different populations. Objectives: In this review, we consider how a proteomic systems-based approach can be used to identify putative novel vaccine targets, may be adopted to characterise subunit vaccines and adjuvants fully. Key findings: Despite the extensive potential for proteomics to aid our understanding of subunit vaccine nature, little work has been reported on identifying MHC 1-binding peptides for subunit vaccines generating T cell responses in the literature to date. Summary: In combination with predictive and structural biology approaches to mapping antigen presentation, proteomics offers a powerful and as yet un-tapped addition to the armoury of vaccine discovery to predict T-cell subset responses and improve vaccine design strategies.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/25292/1/Proteomics_for_vaccine2revised.pdf

Dunston, Christopher R.; Herbert, Rebecca and Griffiths, Helen R. (2015). Improving T cell-induced response to subunit vaccines:opportunities for a proteomic systems approach. Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, 67 (3), pp. 290-299.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/25292/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed