Selected article for: "activate immune and adaptive innate"

Author: Criscuolo, E.; Caputo, V.; Diotti, R. A.; Sautto, G. A.; Kirchenbaum, G. A.; Clementi, N.
Title: Alternative Methods of Vaccine Delivery: An Overview of Edible and Intradermal Vaccines
  • Document date: 2019_3_4
  • ID: 0xo2fiop_28
    Snippet: Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are Gram-positive, nonsporulating, and nonpathogenic bacteria that have been used for decades for the production and preservation of food as well as for therapeutic heterologous gene expression, like the production of different anti-human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV) antibodies (scFV-m9, dAb-m36, and dAb-m36.4) by Lactobacillus jensenii and the production and functional expression of the antilisterial bacteriocin E.....
    Document: Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are Gram-positive, nonsporulating, and nonpathogenic bacteria that have been used for decades for the production and preservation of food as well as for therapeutic heterologous gene expression, like the production of different anti-human immunodeficiency virus (anti-HIV) antibodies (scFV-m9, dAb-m36, and dAb-m36.4) by Lactobacillus jensenii and the production and functional expression of the antilisterial bacteriocin EntA in L. casei [75] [76] [77] . Given these and the ability of LAB to elicit a specific immune response against recombinant foreign antigens, these bacteria have been considered potential candidates as mucosal vaccine vectors. This delivery system can confer protection against antigen degradation and, thanks to its uptake at the GIT level, can activate both innate and adaptive immune responses [78, 79] .

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