Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection/re-infection: development of a protective HCMV vaccine.

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection/re-infection: development of a protective HCMV vaccine. New Microbiol. 2019 Jan 21;42(1) Authors: Gerna G, Lilleri D Abstract In recent years, one of the main objectives in the field of medical virology has been the development of a human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) vaccine that can prevent congenital HCMV infection in the offspring of pregnant women as well as systemic and end-organ disease in immunocompromised (AIDS and transplanted) patients. Major obstacles to the development of an efficacious HCMV vaccine are lack of protection provided by immune memory cells against HCMV re-activation (replication relapse of a latent strain following primary infection) and HCMV re-infection (infection of a seropositive individual by a new virus strain). Thus, while initial efforts were directed at the development of a vaccine for the prevention of primary infection, in the last decade the primary vaccine development endpoint was the prevention of primary HCMV infection, as well as HCMV reactivation and re-infection. Along this line of research, both HCMV live (including Towne, AD169 and its derivatives, Towne/Toledo chimeras, Viral-Vectored vaccines, and Virus Replicon Particles) and non-living vaccines (including the recombinant gB subunit, DNA- and RNA-based vaccines, Virus-like particles, Dense bodies, Peptide vaccines, and the Pentamer Complex) have been developed. To date, Phase I, II, and III clinical tri...
Source: New Microbiologica - Category: Microbiology Tags: New Microbiol Source Type: research