1967
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/117.1.101
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Infectivity and Antigenicity of Streptomycin-Dependent Salmonella typhosa

Abstract: Portions of the work reported here were performed under Project 4Bl1-05-015, "Protective Measures for Personnel in the BW Program,"Task -02," Clinical Investigations Related to R&D Hazards." The expenditure order was 2022. This information was originally submitted as manuscript 5294.The information in this document has not been cleared for release to the public. DDC AVAILABILITY NOTICEQualified requestors may obtain copies of this document from DDC.Foreign announcement and dissemination of this document by DDC… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The modern search for a live oral typhoid vaccine perhaps began with the evaluation of streptomycin-dependent strains of S. p h i as oral vaccines. These strains grow poorly in the absence of the antibiotic (Reitman, 1967). Early encouraging results obtained with non-lyophilized vaccines were not repeatable when attempted with lyophilized preparations, a step essential for practical vaccine development.…”
Section: Early Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The modern search for a live oral typhoid vaccine perhaps began with the evaluation of streptomycin-dependent strains of S. p h i as oral vaccines. These strains grow poorly in the absence of the antibiotic (Reitman, 1967). Early encouraging results obtained with non-lyophilized vaccines were not repeatable when attempted with lyophilized preparations, a step essential for practical vaccine development.…”
Section: Early Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Streptomycin-dependent Salmonella strains described by Reitman and Iverson (120,121) and Mel et al (98) were isolated after repeated cultivation of pathogenic S. typhi in the presence of streptomycin. The rationale used to obtain these strains is that the organisms can become dependent on the antibiotic without exposure to more severe mutagenic agents that might destroy important protective antigens in the bacterial cell.…”
Section: Streptomycin-dependent Mutantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Early attempts to attenuate Salmonella involved the use of mutants of S. typhi which were dependent on streptomycin for growth in vitro [6]. Further attempts resulted in the construction of a practical multi-dose oral typhoid vaccine, Ty21a [7], which has been successfully licensed for use in many countries after its efficacy was demonstrated in field trials [8].…”
Section: Rational Attenuation Of Salmonella Speciesmentioning
confidence: 99%