Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara: History, Value in Basic Research, and Current Perspectives for Vaccine Development

被引:211
作者
Volz, A. [1 ]
Sutter, G. [1 ]
机构
[1] LMU Univ Munich, German Ctr Infect Res DZIF, Inst Infect Dis & Zoonoses, Munich, Germany
来源
ADVANCES IN VIRUS RESEARCH, VOL 97 | 2017年 / 97卷
关键词
RESPIRATORY SYNDROME CORONAVIRUS; WEST-NILE-VIRUS; BACTERIAL ARTIFICIAL CHROMOSOME; INVERTED TERMINAL REPETITION; CHEMOKINE BINDING-PROTEIN; SYNDROME SARS CORONAVIRUS; ATTENUATED MVA STRAIN; AVIAN INFLUENZA-VIRUS; T-CELL IMMUNOGENICITY; ANKYRIN-LIKE PROTEIN;
D O I
10.1016/bs.aivir.2016.07.001
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Safety tested Modified Vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) is licensed as third-generation vaccine against smallpox and serves as a potent vector system for development of new candidate vaccines against infectious diseases and cancer. Historically, MVA was developed by serial tissue culture passage in primary chicken cells of vaccinia virus strain Ankara, and clinically used to avoid the undesirable side effects of conventional smallpox vaccination. Adapted to growth in avian cells MVA lost the ability to replicate in mammalian hosts and lacks many of the genes orthopoxviruses use to conquer their host (cell) environment. As a biologically well-characterized mutant virus, MVA facilitates fundamental research to elucidate the functions of poxvirus host-interaction factors. As extremely safe viral vectors MVA vaccines have been found immunogenic and protective in various preclinical infection models. Multiple recombinant MVA currently undergo clinical testing for vaccination against human immunodeficiency viruses, Mycobacterium tuberculosis or Plasmodium falciparum. The versatility of the MVA vector vaccine platform is readily demonstrated by the swift development of experimental vaccines for immunization against emerging infections such as the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome. Recent advances include promising results from the clinical testing of recombinant MVA-producing antigens of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 or Ebola virus. This review summarizes our current knowledge about MVA as a unique strain of vaccinia virus, and discusses the prospects of exploiting this virus as research tool in poxvirus biology or as safe viral vector vaccine to challenge existing and future bottlenecks in vaccinology.
引用
收藏
页码:187 / 243
页数:57
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