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ABSTRACT: From the clinical editor
Despite the widespread use of vaccines worldwide, successful development of vaccines against some diseases remains a challenge still. In this article, the authors investigated the physic-chemical and biological properties of icosahedral self-assembling protein nanoparticles (SAPNs), which mimic viral particles, in order to utilize this technology as potential platform for future design of vaccines.
SUBMITTER: Doll TA
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4587294 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Oct
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Doll Tais A P F TA Neef Tobias T Duong Nha N Lanar David E DE Ringler Philippe P Müller Shirley A SA Burkhard Peter P
Nanomedicine : nanotechnology, biology, and medicine 20150604 7
Successful vaccine development remains a huge challenge for infectious diseases such as malaria, HIV and influenza. As a novel way to present antigenic epitopes to the immune system, we have developed icosahedral self-assembling protein nanoparticles (SAPNs) to serve as a prototypical vaccine platform for infectious diseases. Here we examine some biophysical factors that affect the self-assembly of these nanoparticles, which have as basic building blocks coiled-coil oligomerization domains joine ...[more]