Ebola vaccine
Ebola Vaccines- Vaccines employed for prevention of Ebola disease are Ebola vaccines. The vaccines for prevention of Ebola infections are developed, but no vaccine is approved for treatment in humans. The vaccines developed resemble recombinant vector vaccines and include Replication-deficient adenovirus vectors, Replication-competent vesicular stomatitis (VSV) and Human parainfluenza (HPIV-3) vectors as examples.
Vaccines include replication-deficient adenovirus vectors, replication-competent vesicular stomatitis (VSV) and human parainfluenza (HPIV-3) vectors, and virus-like nanoparticle preparations. Conventional trials to study efficacy by exposure of humans to the pathogen after immunization are not ethical in this case. For such situations, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has established the "animal efficacy rule" allowing licensure to be approved on the basis of animal model studies that replicate human disease, combined with evidence of safety and a potentially potent immune response (antibodies in the blood) from humans given the vaccine. Clinical trials involve the administration of the vaccine to healthy human subjects to evaluate the immune response, identify any side effects and determine the appropriate dosage.
Ebola GP vaccine
Recombinant formation plasmids
At the 8th Vaccine and ISV Conference in Philadelphia on 27−28 October 2014, Novavax Inc. reported the development in a "few weeks" of a glycoprotein (GP) nanoparticle Ebola virus (EBOV GP) vaccine using their proprietary recombinant technology. A recombinant protein is a protein whose code is carried by recombinant DNA.
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