Gene A. Palmer
Novartis
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Featured researches published by Gene A. Palmer.
Vaccine | 2008
Yoko Shoji; Jessica A. Chichester; Hong Bi; Konstantin Musiychuk; Patricia de la Rosa; Lauren Goldschmidt; April Horsey; Natalia Ugulava; Gene A. Palmer; Vadim Mett; Vidadi Yusibov
Influenza is a globally important respiratory pathogen that causes a high degree of morbidity and mortality annually. Although current vaccines are effective against virus infection, new strategies need to be developed to satisfy the global demand for an influenza vaccine. To address this point, we have engineered and produced the full-length hemagglutinin (HA) protein from the A/Wyoming/03/03 (H3N2) strain of influenza in plants. The antigenicity of this plant-produced HA was confirmed by ELISA and single-radial immunodiffusion (SRID) assays. Immunization of mice with plant-produced HA resulted in HA-specific humoral (IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b) and cellular (IFNgamma and IL-5) immune responses. In addition, significant serum hemagglutination inhibition (HI) and virus neutralizing (VN) antibody titers were obtained with an antigen dose as low as 5mug. These results demonstrate that plant-produced HA protein is antigenic and can induce immune responses in mice that correlate with protection.
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2008
Vadim Mett; Konstantin Musiychuk; Hong Bi; Christine E. Farrance; April Horsey; Natalia Ugulava; Yoko Shoji; Patricia de la Rosa; Gene A. Palmer; Shailaja Rabindran; Stephen J. Streatfield; Alison Boyers; Michael Russell; Alex Mann; Robert Lambkin; John Oxford; G.C. Schild; Vidadi Yusibov
Background Influenza A viruses are of major concern for public health, causing worldwide epidemics associated with high morbidity and mortality. Vaccines are critical for protection against influenza, but given the recent emergence of new strains with pandemic potential, and some limitations of the current production systems, there is a need for new approaches for vaccine development.
Virology Journal | 2010
Pirada Suphaphiphat; Michael Franti; Armin Hekele; Anders E. Lilja; Terika Spencer; Ethan C. Settembre; Gene A. Palmer; Stefania Crotta; Annunziata Barbara Tuccino; Bjoern Keiner; Heidi Trusheim; Kara Balabanis; Melissa Sackal; Mithra Rothfeder; Christian W. Mandl; Philip R. Dormitzer; Peter W. Mason
Obtaining suitable seed viruses for influenza vaccines poses a challenge for public health authorities and manufacturers. We used reverse genetics to generate vaccine seed-compatible viruses from the 2009 pandemic swine-origin influenza virus. Comparison of viruses recovered with variations in residues 186 and 194 (based on the H3 numbering system) of the viral hemagglutinin showed that these viruses differed with respect to their ability to grow in eggs and cultured cells. Thus, we have demonstrated that molecular cloning of members of a quasispecies can help in selection of seed viruses for vaccine manufacture.
Human Vaccines | 2011
Yoko Shoji; Jessica A. Chichester; Gene A. Palmer; Christine E. Farrance; Robert Stevens; Michelle Stewart; Lauren Goldschmidt; Varough Deyde; Larisa V. Gubareva; Alexander Klimov; Vadim Mett; Vidadi Yusibov
H5N1 avian influenza continues to be a potential pandemic threat. Several vaccine candidates based on potentially pandemic influenza strains and antiviral drugs have been tested in preclinical and clinical studies. The data obtained so far have shown some promise, but have also revealed some shortcomings with both of these approaches. We have identified and characterized an H5N1 neuraminidase-specific monoclonal antibody which specifically inhibits N1 neuraminidase activity of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) strains from clades 1 and 2. We have also shown the protective efficacy of this antibody in animal challenge models using homologous virus. Specific and effective inhibition of N1 NA could make this mAb a useful therapeutic tool in the treatment of human infection, in particular with oseltamivir- and zanamivir-resistant strains of HPAI.
Vaccine | 2013
Christine A. Shaw; Jean-Rene Galarneau; Kathryn E. Bowenkamp; Kurt Swanson; Gene A. Palmer; Giuseppe Palladino; Judit Markovits; Nicholas M. Valiante; Philip R. Dormitzer; Gillis Otten
In the 1960s, infant immunization with a formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus (FI-RSV) vaccine candidate caused enhanced respiratory disease (ERD) following natural RSV infection. Because of this tragedy, intensive effort has been made to understand the root causes of how the FI-RSV vaccine induced a pathogenic response to subsequent RSV infection in vaccinees. A well-established cotton rat model of FI-RSV vaccine-enhanced disease has been used by numerous researchers to study the mechanisms of ERD. Here, we have dissected the model and found it to have significant limitations for understanding FI-RSV ERD. This view is shaped by our finding that a major driver of lung pathology is cell-culture contaminants, although FI-RSV immunization and RSV challenge serve as co-factors to exacerbate disease. Specifically, non-viral products from the vaccine and challenge preparations that are devoid of RSV give rise to alveolitis, which is considered a hallmark of FI-RSV ERD in the cotton rat model. Although FI-RSV immunization and RSV challenge promote more severe alveolitis, they also drive stronger cellular immune responses to non-viral antigens. The severity of alveolitis is associated with T cells specific for non-viral antigens more than with T cells specific for RSV. These results highlight the limitations of the cotton rat ERD model and the need for an improved animal model to evaluate the safety of RSV vaccine candidates.
Advances in Biochemical Engineering \/ Biotechnology | 2013
Marina Skarjinskaia; Karen Ruby; Adriana Araujo; Karina Taylor; Vengadesan Gopalasamy-Raju; Konstantin Musiychuk; Jessica A. Chichester; Gene A. Palmer; Patricia de la Rosa; Vadim Mett; Natalia Ugulava; Stephen J. Streatfield; Vidadi Yusibov
Prevention of infectious diseases by vaccination is often limited because of the lack of safe, effective, and accessible vaccines. Traditional vaccines are expensive and require special conditions for storage, distribution, and administration. Plants have potential for large-scale production of a variety of inexpensive and highly effective recombinant proteins for biomedical and pharmaceutical applications, including subunit vaccines. There are several approaches for the production of vaccine antigens in plants, including transient expression systems based on Agrobacterium delivery of binary vectors or plant viral vectors, stable transgenic plants, and plant cell or tissue cultures. Axenic plant cultures maintained under defined physical and chemical conditions appear to be an attractive production platform when target proteins need to be synthesized in a fully controlled environment. Hairy root cultures meet the criteria for such a system. Hairy root cultures, generated from edible plants and producing target antigens, provide a potential approach for the development of vaccines for oral delivery. With this approach, there are no protein extraction and purification costs and the active biomolecule is protected by the plant cell wall during passage through the upper gastrointestinal tract. This allows for gradual release of antigen at mucosal surfaces in the gut. Lyophilized hairy root cultures expressing vaccine antigens can be stored at ambient temperature for extended periods of time, which should facilitate storage and distribution, ultimately allowing for large populations to be vaccinated.
Nature Medicine | 2009
Christine A. Shaw; Gillis Otten; Andreas Wack; Gene A. Palmer; Christian W. Mandl; M. Lamine Mbow; Nicholas M. Valiante; Philip R. Dormitzer
To the Editor: The mouse immunization experiments reported in Delgado et al.1 support the hypothesis that failure to elicit affinity-matured, neutralizing antibodies contributed to disease enhancement after immunization of children with a formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus vaccine candidate (FI-RSV) in the 1960s. However, the authors’ assertion that lack of protection by FI-RSV was “not due to alterations caused by formalin but instead to low antibody avidity for protective epitopes” is not justified by the data presented. On the contrary, Figure 3h of their paper presents data showing that neutralizing epitopes are largely absent from FI-RSV, presumably as a result of formalin inactivation or another insult during vaccine preparation. Their conclusion that antibody avidity alone was responsible for disease enhancement predicts that disease enhancement by FI-RSV could be overcome by stimulating affinity maturation with a Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonist. However, they did not report this key test of their proposed explanation for disease enhancement by FI-RSV in the paper. Delgado et al. do show enhanced protective efficacy of ultraviolet light–inactivated RSV upon formulation with TLR agonists, and other investigators have reported that formulating FI-RSV with monophosphoryl lipid A, a TLR4 agonist, reduces vaccine-induced immunopathology in immunized and challenged cotton rats2. The observations by Delgado et al.1 and in the literature indicate that a protective RSV vaccine must both present neutralizing epitopes and elicit affinity-matured antibodies recognizing those epitopes. It stands to reason that vaccine-mediated disease enhancement can Antibody affinity maturation and respiratory syncytial virus disease
Vaccine | 2007
Vadim Mett; Jarred Lyons; Konstantin Musiychuk; Jessica A. Chichester; Trevor Brasil; Ronald Couch; Robert Sherwood; Gene A. Palmer; Stephen J. Streatfield; Vidadi Yusibov
Vaccine | 2007
Jessica A. Chichester; Konstantin Musiychuk; Patricia de la Rosa; April Horsey; Natalie Stevenson; Natalia Ugulava; Shailaja Rabindran; Gene A. Palmer; Vadim Mett; Vidadi Yusibov
Archive | 2007
Vidadi Yusibov; Gene A. Palmer; Vadim Mett