In vivo expressed biologics for infectious disease prophylaxis: rapid delivery of DNA-based antiviral antibodies
Autor: | David D. Ho, Chasity D. Andrews, Rachel A. Liberatore, Yaoxing Huang |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Time Factors Epidemiology medicine.medical_treatment Review Antibodies Viral medicine.disease_cause Communicable Diseases Emerging Mice antivirals Drug Discovery Pandemic gene transfer Coronavirus biology Antibodies Monoclonal emerging infectious disease General Medicine DNA therapeutics Infectious Diseases Emerging infectious disease Antibody Coronavirus Infections Post-Exposure Prophylaxis electroporation medicine.medical_specialty medicine.drug_class Pneumonia Viral 030106 microbiology Immunology Neutralizing antibodies Antiviral Agents Microbiology antibody cocktail 03 medical and health sciences Virology medicine Animals Humans Post-exposure prophylaxis Intensive care medicine Pandemics Biological Products business.industry COVID-19 Outbreak DNA 030104 developmental biology Infectious disease (medical specialty) biology.protein Parasitology Antiviral drug business |
Zdroj: | Emerging Microbes & Infections article-version (VoR) Version of Record |
ISSN: | 2222-1751 |
Popis: | With increasing frequency, humans are facing outbreaks of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) with the potential to cause significant morbidity and mortality. In the most extreme instances, such outbreaks can become pandemics, as we are now witnessing with COVID-19. According to the World Health Organization, this new disease, caused by the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, has already infected more than 10 million people worldwide and led to 499,913 deaths as of 29 June, 2020. How high these numbers will eventually go depends on many factors, including policies on travel and movement, availability of medical support, and, because there is no vaccine or highly effective treatment, the pace of biomedical research. Other than an approved antiviral drug that can be repurposed, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) hold the most promise for providing a stopgap measure to lessen the impact of an outbreak while vaccines are in development. Technical advances in mAb identification, combined with the flexibility and clinical experience of mAbs in general, make them ideal candidates for rapid deployment. Furthermore, the development of mAb cocktails can provide a faster route to developing a robust medical intervention than searching for a single, outstanding mAb. In addition, mAbs are well-suited for integration into platform technologies for delivery, in which minimal components need to be changed in order to be redirected against a novel pathogen. In particular, utilizing the manufacturing and logistical benefits of DNA-based platform technologies in order to deliver one or more antiviral mAbs has the potential to revolutionize EID responses. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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