Current progress towards vaccines for arenavirus-caused diseases

The arenaviruses are primarily viruses of rodents, but some members of the group cause severe disease (Argentine and Bolivian haemorrhagic fevers and Lassa fever) when transmitted to humans in the specific areas of the world where they are enzootic. Current research of relevance to the provision of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 1992, Vol.10 (2), p.89-95
1. Verfasser: Clegg, J.C.S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The arenaviruses are primarily viruses of rodents, but some members of the group cause severe disease (Argentine and Bolivian haemorrhagic fevers and Lassa fever) when transmitted to humans in the specific areas of the world where they are enzootic. Current research of relevance to the provision of vaccines against these diseases, which highlights many of the problems encountered generally in the development of vaccines, is reviewed here. Although one of the classical approaches to vaccine production, the use of inactivated preparations of virus of varying degrees of purity, has produced no results of promise, attenuation of a virulent strain of Junin virus by passage in cultured cells has yielded a vaccine strain currently being tested for efficacy in protecting against Argentine haemorrhagic fever in the human population at risk. The experimental evidence for protection in animal model systems by related, apparently non-pathogenic, viruses and by recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing arenavirus proteins is discussed, together with some of the potential difficulties of these approaches.
ISSN:0264-410X
1873-2518
DOI:10.1016/0264-410X(92)90022-C