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Published in: Archives of Virology 11/2010

01-11-2010 | Original Article

Protection against multiple influenza A virus subtypes by intranasal administration of recombinant nucleoprotein

Authors: Lina Guo, Mei Zheng, Yahong Ding, Dongmei Li, Zhongdong Yang, Haiming Wang, Quanjiao Chen, Zhiwei Sui, Fang Fang, Ze Chen

Published in: Archives of Virology | Issue 11/2010

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Abstract

Vaccination is a cost-effective way to control the influenza epidemic. Vaccines based on highly conserved antigens can provide protection against different influenza A strains and subtypes. In this study, the recombinant nucleoprotein (rNP) of the A/PR/8/34 (H1N1) influenza virus strain was effectively expressed using a prokaryotic expression system and then purified with a nickel-charged Sepharose affinity column as a candidate component for an influenza vaccine. The rNP was administered intranasally three times at 3-week intervals to female BALB/c mice in combination with an adjuvant (cholera toxin B subunit containing 0.2% of the whole toxin). Twenty-one days after the last immunization, the mice were challenged with homologous or heterologous influenza viruses at a lethal dose. The results showed that intranasal immunization of 10 μg rNP with adjuvant completely protected the immunized mice against the homologous influenza virus, and immunization with 100 μg rNP in combination with adjuvant provided good cross-protection against heterologous H5N1 and H9N2 avian influenza viruses. The results indicate that such a vaccine administered intranasally can induce mucosal and cell-mediated immunity, thus having the potential to control epidemics caused by new emerging influenza viruses.
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Metadata
Title
Protection against multiple influenza A virus subtypes by intranasal administration of recombinant nucleoprotein
Authors
Lina Guo
Mei Zheng
Yahong Ding
Dongmei Li
Zhongdong Yang
Haiming Wang
Quanjiao Chen
Zhiwei Sui
Fang Fang
Ze Chen
Publication date
01-11-2010
Publisher
Springer Vienna
Published in
Archives of Virology / Issue 11/2010
Print ISSN: 0304-8608
Electronic ISSN: 1432-8798
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00705-010-0756-3

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