Home | My Profile | Contact Us
Research Trends Products  |   order gateway  |   author gateway  |   editor gateway  
ID:
Password:
Register | Forgot Password

Author Resources
 Author Gateway
 Article submission guidelines

Editor Resources
 Editor/Referee Gateway

Agents/Distributors
 Regional Subscription Agents/Distributors
 
Current Topics in Virology   Volumes    Volume 4 
Abstract
Overcoming diversity with a multi-envelope HIV vaccine
K. S. Slobod, S. A. Brown, S. Surman, A. Zirkel, B. Jones, X. Zhan, B. Sealy, J. Stambas, B. Brown, M. Bonsignori, T. D. Lockey, P. Freiden, J. L. Hurwitz, P. C. Doherty, C. Coleclough
Pages: 159 - 168
Number of pages: 10
Current Topics in Virology
Volume 4 

Copyright © 2004 Research Trends. All rights reserved

ABSTRACT

A central obstacle to the design of a global HIV vaccine is viral diversity. Antigenic differences in envelope proteins result in distinct HIV serotypes, operationally defined such that antibodies raised against envelope from one serotype will not bind envelope molecules from a different serotype. The existence of serotypes has presented a similar challenge to vaccine development against other pathogens. In such cases, antigenic diversity has been addressed by vaccine design: for example, the poliovirus vaccine includes 3 serotypes of poliovirus, and Pneumovax® presents a cocktail of 23 pneumococcal variants to the immune system. It is likely that a successful vaccine for HIV must also comprise a cocktail of antigens. Here, data relevant to the development of cocktail vaccines, designed to harness diverse, envelope-specific B-cell and T-cell responses, are reviewed.

Buy this Article


 
search


E-Commerce
Buy this article
Buy this volume
Subscribe to this title
Shopping Cart

Quick Links
Login
Search Products
Browse in Alphabetical Order : Journals
Series/Books
Browse by Subject Classification : Journals
Series/Books

Miscellaneous
Ordering Information Ordering Information
Downloadable forms Downloadable Forms