Use of Staby® technology for development and production of DNA vaccines free of antibiotic resistance gene

The appearance of new viruses and the cost of developing certain vaccines require that new vaccination strategies now have to be developed. DNA vaccination seems to be a particularly promising method. For this application, plasmid DNA is injected into the subject (man or animal). This plasmid DNA en...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inHuman vaccines & immunotherapeutics Vol. 9; no. 10; pp. 2203 - 2210
Main Authors Reschner, Anca, Scohy, Sophie, Vandermeulen, Gaëlle, Daukandt, Marc, Jacques, Céline, Michel, Benjamin, Nauwynck, Hans, Xhonneux, Florence, Préat, Véronique, Vanderplasschen, Alain, Szpirer, Cédric
Format Journal Article Web Resource
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Taylor & Francis 01.10.2013
Landes Bioscience
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Summary:The appearance of new viruses and the cost of developing certain vaccines require that new vaccination strategies now have to be developed. DNA vaccination seems to be a particularly promising method. For this application, plasmid DNA is injected into the subject (man or animal). This plasmid DNA encodes an antigen that will be expressed by the cells of the subject. In addition to the antigen, the plasmid also encodes a resistance to an antibiotic, which is used during the construction and production steps of the plasmid. However, regulatory agencies (FDA, USDA and EMA) recommend to avoid the use of antibiotics resistance genes. Delphi Genetics developed the Staby ® technology to replace the antibiotic-resistance gene by a selection system that relies on two bacterial genes. These genes are small in size (approximately 200 to 300 bases each) and consequently encode two small proteins. They are naturally present in the genomes of bacteria and on plasmids. The technology is already used successfully for production of recombinant proteins to achieve higher yields and without the need of antibiotics. In the field of DNA vaccines, we have now the first data validating the innocuousness of this Staby ® technology for eukaryotic cells and the feasibility of an industrial production of an antibiotic-free DNA vaccine. Moreover, as a proof of concept, mice have been successfully vaccinated with our antibiotic-free DNA vaccine against a deadly disease, pseudorabies (induced by Suid herpesvirus-1).
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scopus-id:2-s2.0-84885103175
ISSN:2164-5515
2164-554X
1554-8619
1554-8600
2164-554X
DOI:10.4161/hv.25086