Abstract
Non-replicating rotavirus vaccines are alternative strategies that may improve the protective efficacy of rotavirus vaccines in low-and middle-income countries. The truncated spike protein VP4 (aa26-476, VP4*)was a candidate antigen for the development of recombinant rotavirus vac-cines, with higher immunogenicity and protective efficacy compared to VP8* and VP5* alone. This article describes the development of three genotype-specific sandwich ELISAs for P[4], P[6], and P[8]-VP4*, which are important for quality control in rotavirus vaccine production. Our results showed that the detection systems had good specificity for the different genotype VP4* and were not influenced by the E.coli host proteins. Moreover, the detection systems play an important role in determining whether the target protein was contaminated by VP4* proteins of other genotypes. They can also detect the adsorption rate of the adjuvant to the P[4], P[6], P[8]-VP4* protein during the process development. The three detection systems will play an important role in the quality control and process development of VP4* based rotavirus vaccines and facilitate the development of recombinant rotavirus vaccines.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Li, C., Luo, G., Zeng, Y., Song, F., Yang, H., Zhang, S., … Xia, N. (2022). Establishment of Sandwich ELISA for Quality Control in Rotavirus Vaccine Production. Vaccines, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10020243
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.