An effective vaccine for the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major unmet medical and public health need, and it requires an antigen that elicits immune responses to multiple key conserved epitopes. Decades of research have generated a number of vaccine candidates; based on these data and research through clinical development, a vaccine antigen based on the E1E2 glycoprotein complex appears to be the best choice. One bottleneck in the development of an E1E2-based vaccine is that the antigen is challenging to produce in large quantities and at high levels of purity and anti-genic/functional integrity. This review describes the production and characterization of E1E2-based vaccine antigens, both membrane-associated and a novel secreted form of E1E2, with a particular emphasis on the major challenges facing the field and how those challenges can be addressed.
CITATION STYLE
Toth, E. A., Chagas, A., Pierce, B. G., & Fuerst, T. R. (2021, June 1). Structural and biophysical characterization of the HCV E1E2 heterodimer for vaccine development. Viruses. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/v13061027
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