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Progress Towards the Development of New Vaccines Against Whooping Cough

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Journal Vaccine
Date 1992 Jan 1
PMID 1471424
Citations 8
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Abstract

Acellular vaccines against whooping cough are in the final stage of clinical testing and are likely to become available for mass immunization in the near future. Over a dozen vaccines of similar composition have been developed by vaccine companies and research laboratories; all of them contain a detoxified form of pertussis toxin (PT) that may be present alone or combined with one or more other non-toxic proteins, such as filamentous haemagglutinin (FHA), pertactin (69 kDa), and the agglutinogens (AGG). Most of the vaccines contain a PT that has been inactivated by chemical treatment, a process that reduces the immunogenicity of the molecule and may not completely eliminate the risk of reversion to toxicity. To avoid these problems, we have constructed by genetic manipulation a mutant of Bordetella pertussis that produces a non-toxic form of PT. This molecule (PT-9K/129G) contains two amino acid substitutions in the S1 subunit (Arg9-->Lys and Glu129-->Gly) which abolish the enzymatic activity of the S1 subunit and all the toxic properties of PT, without changing the immunological properties of the wild-type toxin. Following extensive preclinical studies, which have shown that PT-9K/129G is safe and more antigenic than the toxin treated with chemical agents, this molecule was tested for safety and immunogenicity in adult volunteers, 18-month-old children and 2-month-old infants. The molecule has been tested alone, combined with FHA and pertactin and also combined with diphtheria and tetanus toxoids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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