Pseudoviruses, a safer toolbox for vaccine development against enveloped viruses

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Abstract

Introduction: Pseudoviruses are recombinant, replication-incompetent, viral particles designed to mimic the surface characteristics of native enveloped viruses. They are a safer, and cost-effective research alternative to live viruses. With the potential emergence of the next major infectious disease, more vaccine scientists must become familiar with the pseudovirus platform as a vaccine development tool to mitigate future outbreaks. Areas Covered: This review aims at vaccine developers to provide a basic understanding of pseudoviruses, list their production methods, and discuss their utility to assess vaccine efficacy against enveloped viral pathogens. We further illustrate their usefulness as wet-lab simulators for emerging mutant variants, and new viruses to help prepare for current and future viral outbreaks, minimizing the need for gain-of-function experiments with highly infectious or lethal enveloped viruses. Expert opinion: With this platform, researchers can better understand the role of virus–receptor interactions and entry in infections, prepare for dangerous mutations, and develop effective vaccines.

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Thimmiraju, S. R., Kimata, J. T., & Pollet, J. (2024). Pseudoviruses, a safer toolbox for vaccine development against enveloped viruses. Expert Review of Vaccines. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2023.2299380

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