2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2006.04.084
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Post‐genomic vaccine development

Abstract: For over a century, vaccines were developed according to Pasteur's principles of isolating, inactivating and injecting the causative agent of an infectious disease. The availability of a complete microbial genome sequence in 1995 marked the beginning of a genomic era that has allowed scientists to change the paradigm and approach vaccine development starting from genomic information, a process named reverse vaccinology. This can be considered as one of the most powerful examples of how genomic information can … Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(94 citation statements)
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“…Although successful in many cases, these approaches have failed to provide vaccines against pathogens that did not have obvious immunodominant protective antigens [12]. With the advent of whole-genome sequencing and advances in bioinformatics, the vaccinology field has radically changed, providing the opportunity for developing novel and improved vaccines.…”
Section: (E) From Genomes To Reverse Vaccinologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although successful in many cases, these approaches have failed to provide vaccines against pathogens that did not have obvious immunodominant protective antigens [12]. With the advent of whole-genome sequencing and advances in bioinformatics, the vaccinology field has radically changed, providing the opportunity for developing novel and improved vaccines.…”
Section: (E) From Genomes To Reverse Vaccinologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reverse vaccinology uses bioinformatics in the initial steps to identify potential antigens, which are consequently examined for their effectiveness and toxicity. The use of algorithm for prediction of subcellular location improved the power of identifying potential vaccine candidates (Serruto and Rappuoli, 2006). Subsequently, developments have been proposed to reverse vaccinology by suggesting the use of additional algorithms to find probability of being an adhesin, of topology (transmembrane domains) and to find similarity with host protein (Vivona et al, 2006).…”
Section: Malaria Vaccine Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Structural biology is increasingly being applied to vaccine development (structural vaccinology), focusing on determining and understanding the structural basis of immunodominant and immunosilent antigens, to enable the rational design of peptide mimetics of bactericidal epitopes (95,96). The explosion of genome and proteome data, as well as improved protein expression, purification, and structural determination technologies, has led to the rapid development of the field of structural vaccinology (97).…”
Section: Structural Vaccinology: the Next Generation Of Epitope Mappimentioning
confidence: 99%