Development of Vaccines Based on Virus-Like Particles
A special issue of Vaccines (ISSN 2076-393X). This special issue belongs to the section "Vaccines against Tropical and other Infectious Diseases".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2021) | Viewed by 61471
Special Issue Editors
Interests: virology; vaccines; VLPs; peptides; calicivirus; picornavirus; T-epitopes; B-epitopes; adaptive immunity
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: virology; vaccines; chimeric VLPs; caliciviruses
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Basic studies on virus structure and assembly have led to the experimental observation that many viral structural proteins have the intrinsic ability to self-assemble into virus-like particles (VLPs). These VLPs have led to better immunological mimics of whole-virus particles compared to soluble capsid subunits, resulting in the improved effectiveness of vaccines and leading to a renaissance in vaccine development.
VLP-based vaccines combine many of the advantages of whole-virus-based and recombinant subunit vaccines, exhibiting a high safety profile. VLPs produced using recombinant protein expression systems can stimulate strong B- and T-cell immune responses and have been shown to exhibit self-adjuvanting abilities. In addition, VLPs can be used as platforms for the multimeric display of foreign antigens of interest derived from viruses or other pathogens (chimeric VLPs).
This Special Issue aims to collect recent research work on the design, generation and use of VLPs and chimeric VLPs for the development of both human and veterinary new generation vaccines.
Dr. Esther Blanco
Dr. Juan Bárcena
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- virus-like particles
- VLPs
- chimeric VLPs
- conjugated VLPs
- virosomes
- nanoparticles
- nanocarriers
- prophylactic vaccines
- therapeutic vaccines
- multimeric presentation
- immune response
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