Endotoxin removal : a critical step in vaccine production


Autoria(s): Danquah, M. K.; Ho, J.; Liu, S.; Forde, G. M.
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

A major drawback to the immunological potency of conventional vaccines, resulting in reduced level of immune responses, tissue injury, shock and high cytotoxicity, thus making their applications contraindicated in immunodeficiency diseases, is the presence of high contaminant concentrations in vaccine titers. Vaccine contamination arises from the simultaneous occurrence of competitive pathways resulting in the formation of other bio-products during cellular metabolism aside the pathways necessary for the production of vaccine molecules. One of such vaccine contaminating molecules is endotoxins which are mainly lipopolysaccharides (LPS) complexes found in the membrane of bacterial cell wall. The structural dynamics of these molecules make their removal from vaccine titers problematic, thus making vaccine endotoxin removal a major research endeavour. This presentation will discuss a novel technique for reducing the endotoxin level of vaccines. The technique commences with the disentanglement of endotoxin-vaccine molecular bonding and then capturing the vaccine molecules on an affinity monolith to separate the vaccine molecules from the endotoxins.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81668/

Publicador

AIChE

Relação

http://www3.aiche.org/Proceedings/Abstract.aspx?ConfID=Annual-2009&GroupID=1369&SessionID=8392&PaperID=148601

Danquah, M. K., Ho, J., Liu, S., & Forde, G. M. (2009) Endotoxin removal : a critical step in vaccine production. In 2009 AIChE Annual Meeting Conference Proceedings, AIChE, Nashville, TN.

Fonte

School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Science & Engineering Faculty

Tipo

Conference Paper