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Federal grant awarded to the Jackson Laboratory for vaccine research

June 30th, 2016

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has awarded a grant totaling $3.4 million over five years to Jackson Laboratory Professor and Director of Immunological Sciences Jacques Banchereau, Ph.D. to develop new clinical adjuvants—agents that boost vaccine effectiveness—to better protect elderly and immunosuppressed patients.

In the U.S., an estimated 90 percent of deaths due to influenza are in people aged 65 and older. "Vaccines are essential public health tools that have protected countless individuals from illness and death due to infectious disease," Banchereau says, "but many in use today provide insufficient protection, especially for older patients and those with compromised immune systems."

Adjuvants are components of vaccines that are added to boost the immune response to vaccines, but, Banchereau notes, "few adjuvants have been proven safe and effective for use in humans. This new funding will allow us to screen new combinations of adjuvants in human immune cells, and to investigate their mechanisms of action, with the ultimate goal of discovering new combinations that boost the efficacy of vaccines and lead to new vaccine development."

Adjuvant substances include liposomes, lipopolysaccharide, components of bacterial cell walls, and some forms of DNA. They generally stimulate innate immune response by mimicking a natural infection, and augment the activities of specific components of the immune system: dendritic cells, lymphocytes and macrophages.

The research team will focus their efforts on human dendritic cells, which facilitate the changes in T and B cells that provide subsequent immunity, searching for combination adjuvants that lead to enhanced immune response in vitro and in laboratory mice. They will work with industry partners to bring successful combinations to human vaccination trials.

Banchereau comments, "This project will leverage The Jackson Laboratory's cutting-edge technologies, innovative mouse models, powerful computational and bioinformatics infrastructure, and the complementary expertise of a dynamic team of investigators."

Provided by Jackson Laboratory

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