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Novel concept for HIV and cancer vaccines

5 Feb 2015
Novel concept for HIV and cancer vaccines

A experimental trial has shown successful by inducing serum in mice and has been highly neutralising towards those ailments.

A team of specialists from the Institute of Biomedical Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) has worked on developing a vaccine against HIV / AIDS and cancer.

The research group proposed that HIV vaccine should be able to induce both humoral and cellular response, both being the main mechanisms of defence against pathogens.

To face the challenge of antigenic variation of the virus, researchers suggest the construction of vaccines based on 'Variable Epitope Libraries' (VEL’s) can counteract this obstacle.

Epitopes are small fragments of an antigen, for example, of a protein, recognised by the immune system.

Dr Karen Manoutcharían, head of the research, explains that to treat with antigenically variable pathogens its require to build a no less complex immunogen that the target itself, incorporating antigenic variability.

The (VEL’s) allow to face the enormous variability of pathogens such as HIV, hepatitis, influenza, malaria, dengue and cancer.

Therefore, the proposal of the research group is "a new concept of vaccines that can incorporate antigenic diversity into a vaccine," says the specialist at UNAM.

Dr Manoutcharían indicates that conventional vaccines are based on total antigens but its application to antigenically variable pathogens is unsuccessful because the high variability allows to escape recognition by the immune system.

The application of this new concept allowed to build vaccines capable of inducing broadly neutralising serum in mice against HIV, the neutralisation obtained is the best in its class compared to other vaccines based on epitopes.

Cancer

Applying VEL’s based vaccines in a mouse model of breast cancer allowed researchers to reduce tumour growth and lung metastasis mediated by the activation of lymphocytes T.

The main problem with cancer vaccines is the high antigenic variability of cancer cells mediated by mutations, which appear as a result of genetic instability.

An additional problem to generate vaccines against cancer is the inability to break immune tolerance against their own proteins (antigens), as these cancerous cells present antigenic profile almost identical to the profiles of healthy cells of the same individual.

Under the concept of VEL’s, specialists at the Biomedical Research Institute decided to apply in the construction of vaccines against breast cancer and melanoma in mouse models.

The results of the research group are highly promising as a universal concept for the generation of vaccines against antigenically variable pathogens and cancer.

These findings are the result of years of research and have been published in international journals such as Molecular Immunology, Vaccine and Human Vaccines, and Immunotherapeutics.

Source: Investigación y Desarrollo