Delivery of subunit influenza vaccine to skin with microneedles improves immunogenicity and long-lived protection. Koutsonanos, DG; Vassilieva, EV; Stavropoulou, A; Zarnitsyn, VG; Esser, ES; Taherbhai, MT; Prausnitz, MR; Compans, RW; Skountzou, I Scientific reports
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357
2012
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Influenza infection represents a major socio-economic burden worldwide. Novel delivery methods can render influenza vaccination easier and more acceptable by the public, and importantly confer protection equal or superior to that induced by conventional systemic administration. An attractive target for vaccine delivery is the skin. Recent studies have demonstrated improved immune responses after transdermal delivery of inactivated influenza virus with microneedle patches. Here we show that immunization with a licensed influenza subunit vaccine coated on metal microneedles can activate both humoral and cellular arms of the immune response and confer improved long-term protection in the mouse model when compared to the conventional systemic route of delivery. These results demonstrate the promising potential of microneedle delivery of licensed influenza subunit vaccines, that could be beneficial in increasing vaccine coverage and protection and reducing influenza-related mortality worldwide. | 22500210
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Monoclonal antibodies for the rapid diagnosis of influenza A and B virus infections by immunofluorescence. McQuillin, J, et al. Lancet, 2: 911-4 (1985)
1985
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Mouse monoclonal antibodies, directed against antigenic sites on influenza A and B viruses and found to be type-specific in an immunoassay, were assessed for use as diagnostic reagents in an indirect immunofluorescence assay on nasopharyngeal secretions. The influenza A antibodies were directed against nucleoprotein or matrix protein antigens and the influenza B antibodies against nucleoprotein and haemagglutinin antigens. The influenza A anti-matrix monoclonal antibody was found to give a strong intranuclear particulate fluorescence in normal baboon kidney cells and cells from nasopharyngeal secretions negative for influenza A virus, including those from a patient infected with respiratory syncytial virus. Pools of the remaining monoclonal antibodies gave satisfactory results on 25 specimens from patients with influenza A H1N1 and H3N2 subtypes and 12 from patients with influenza B. | 2865418
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