Immunisation with DNA polynucleotides protects mice against lethal challenge with St. Louis encephalitis virus.

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Abstract

In vivo transfection by intramuscular injection with plasmids expressing the immunogenic proteins of microbial pathogens has considerable potential as a vaccination strategy against many pathogens of both man and animals. Here we report that weanling mice given a single intramuscular injection of 50 micrograms of a plasmid, pSLE1 expressing the St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLE) prM/E protein under the control of the cytomegalovirus immediate early protein promoter produced SLE-specific antibody and were protected against lethal challenge with the virulent virus. Polynucleotide vaccine technology provides a unique opportunity to produce vaccines against flavivirus diseases of low incidence cheaply and rapidly, and to produce multivalent vaccines such as would be required for immunisation against dengue virus disease.

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Phillpotts, R. J., Venugopal, K., & Brooks, T. (1996). Immunisation with DNA polynucleotides protects mice against lethal challenge with St. Louis encephalitis virus. Archives of Virology, 141(3–4), 743–749. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01718332

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