The Use of Adjuvants in Experimental Vaccines: IV. ISCOMS
The use of saponin in experimental vaccines has been known for more than 60 yr (1 , Chapter 9 ) and generally it is more active as an adjuvant with strongly immunogenic antigens. A number of saponins are derived from the bark of the South American soaptree (Quillaja saponaria ) as acylated triterpenoids each having quillaic acid as the aglycone but with different glycosidic side chains. From the crude preparations it has been possible to refine purer mixtures, e.g., Quil A (2 ) and QS-21 (3 ). These have been shown to exert an adjuvant effect at doses as low as 5.0–20.0 μg. Because a wide variety of foods contain saponins there is potential for their use in oral vaccines, but there has been some reluctance to use them parenterally because of their known membranolytic and hemolytic effects; ISCOMs have not been shown to possess hemolytm activity at the usual dose levels used in animals.
- 噬菌體展示抗體庫構建的載體
- 膠體金制備實驗FAQ
- 免疫金銀染色雙PAG法的操作步驟
- 單克隆抗體
- Tetramer Staining for the Detection of HLA-Specific B cells
- Support Vector Machine-Based Prediction of MHC-Binding Peptides
- Screening for Compounds That Affect the Interaction Between Bacterial Two-Component Signal Transduction Response Regulator Prote
- Reverse Genetics Analysis of Antiparasitic Responses in the Malaria Vector, Anopheles gambiae
- Fast Generation of Stable Cell Lines Expressing Fluorescent Marker Molecules to Study Pathogen Induced Processes
- CD61分子