China has undertaken several major programs of terrestrial ecosystem restoration (ERPs) in recent years, including the Natural Forest Protection Program (NFPP) and the Sloping Land Conversion Program (SLCP). There have been reports on the implementation of these programs, their preliminary impacts, and the problems encountered in carrying them out; a great deal has been learned from these studies. Nonetheless, China's ERPs are not limited to the NFPP and the SLCP. Because a complete documentation and a timely update of these major efforts are still missing from the literature, it is difficult to gauge the scope of these programs and the scale of their impacts. In addition, a more thorough and critical analysis of both the general ERP policy and the specific technical measures used in implementing the ERPs remains urgently needed. The purpose of this article is to tackle these tasks. Overall, with the huge government investments in the ERPs, tremendous progress has been made in implementing them. To complete them successfully and to fundamentally improve the targeted ecosystems, however, it is essential for China to have a more balanced and comprehensive approach to ecological restoration. This approach must include: adopting better planning and management practices; strengthening the governance of program implementation; emphasizing the active engagement of local people; establishing an independent, competent monitoring network; and conducting adequate assessments of program effectiveness and impact.
Epitope vaccine is a promising option for prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination against Helicobacter pylori infection. Urease is an essential virulence factor and colonization factor for H. pylori. In this study, we constructed a multi-epitope vaccine named CTB-UE with mucosal adjuvant cholera toxin B subunit (CTB) and tandem copies of Th and B cell epitopes from H. pylori urease A and B subunits. The immunogenicity, specificity, ability to induce neutralizing antibodies against H. pylori urease, and prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy of the CTB-UE vaccine were evaluated in BALB/c mice model after purification. The experimental results indicated that CTB-UE could induce comparatively high levels of specific antibodies against native H. pylori urease, UreA, UreB, or the selected B cell epitopes UreA₁₈₃₋₂₀₃ and UreB₃₂₇₋₃₃₄ involved with the active site of urease and showed an effectively inhibitory effect on the enzymatic activity of urease. Besides, oral prophylactic or therapeutic immunization with CTB-UE significantly decreased H. pylori colonization compared with oral immunization with rUreB or PBS, and the protection was correlated with antigen-specific CD4⁺ T cells and IgG, IgA, and mucosal sIgA antibody responses. This CTB-UE vaccine may be a promising vaccine candidate for the control of H. pylori infection.
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