Novel Human Rotavirus Vaccine CDC-6 Strain for Impacted Subgroup, the Lewis Negative Population
Approximately 5-10% of the world's population are Lewis histoblood group antigen negative, that percentage is as high as 30% in some African countries. Despite vaccination, the Lewis negative population show a disproportionate prevalence and recurrence of rotavirus infection. However, initial studies have shown that infection with a rotavirus G9P[6] strain may provide improved protection within this group. Inventors have isolated a human rotavirus G9P[6] strain, designated CDC-6, that grows to a high titer with a stable outer structure, making it an ideal vaccine candidate strain. The CDC-6 strain possesses favorable virological and molecular features and may serve as a promising candidate for a new live oral or an inactivated rotavirus vaccine. CDC seeks partners to jointly develop this technology in pre-clinical and clinical testing.
- Novel rotavirus vaccines
- Neonatal/childhood vaccination initiatives
- Large scale antigen production
- Use in diagnostics of rotavirus disease
- Rotavirus surveillance programs, important for both developing and developed nations
- New vaccine candidate option for animals
- Research tool
- Broader population coverage (both the Lewis-positive and negative population)
- Isolated strains are representative of those involved in community-acquired infection
- Suitable for the development of improved, broadly effective rotavirus vaccines; no current vaccine has the P[6] antigen strain
- Potential for a new inactivated injection and/or live oral vaccine format
- May be administered alone or in combination with other vaccines
- First human G9P[6] genotype that can grow to high titer in Vero cells
- Shown to maintain the integrity of triple layered particles during upstream and downstream process