Lewis George K
Division of Basic Science and Vaccine Research, Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute and University of Maryland Baltimore, 725 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Expert Rev Vaccines. 2007 Jun;6(3):431-40. doi: 10.1586/14760584.6.3.431.
It has been nearly 20 years since the first Phase I clinical trial of a live-attenuated bacterial vaccine was created by recombinant DNA methods, opening the door to the use of these organisms as mucosal delivery vehicles for passenger antigens. Over this time, a number of animal studies have indicated the feasibility of this approach. These include studies showing that bacteria can deliver antigens expressed by the bacterium itself and that bacteria can deliver DNA vaccines to be expressed in target eukaryotic cells. Concomitant studies have identified a number of attenuating mutations that render the bacterial vectors both safe and immunogenic in humans. Both avenues of research indicate the significant promise of this approach to mucosal vaccine development; however, this promise remains largely unrealized at the level of human clinical trials. This review sketches the history of this problem and points toward possible solutions using Salmonella vaccine vectors as the prototypes.
自通过重组DNA方法创建首个减毒活细菌疫苗的I期临床试验以来,已经过去了近20年,这为将这些生物体用作乘客抗原的粘膜递送载体打开了大门。在此期间,大量动物研究表明了这种方法的可行性。这些研究包括表明细菌可以递送由细菌自身表达的抗原,以及细菌可以递送DNA疫苗以在靶真核细胞中表达。同时进行的研究已经鉴定出许多减毒突变,这些突变使细菌载体在人类中既安全又具有免疫原性。这两条研究途径都表明了这种粘膜疫苗开发方法的巨大前景;然而,在人类临床试验层面,这一前景在很大程度上仍未实现。本综述概述了这一问题的历史,并指出了以沙门氏菌疫苗载体为原型的可能解决方案。