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  2. DNA vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_vaccine

    Conventional vaccines contain either specific antigens from a pathogen, or attenuated viruses which stimulate an immune response in the vaccinated organism. DNA vaccines are members of the genetic vaccines, because they contain a genetic information (DNA or RNA) that codes for the cellular production (protein biosynthesis) of an antigen.

  3. Genetic vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_vaccine

    In 1995, Robert Conry and colleagues described that a humoral immune response was also elicited after vaccination with an RNA vaccine. [13] [11] While DNA vaccines were more frequently researched in the early years due to their ease of production, low cost, and high stability to degrading enzymes, but sometimes produced low vaccine responses ...

  4. Vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine

    They can generate T H and antibody responses, but not killer T cell responses. [citation needed] RNA vaccines and DNA vaccines are examples of third generation vaccines. [169] [170] [171] In 2016 a DNA vaccine for the Zika virus began testing at the National Institutes of Health. Separately, Inovio Pharmaceuticals and GeneOne Life Science began ...

  5. How mRNA and DNA vaccines could soon treat cancers, HIV ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/mrna-dna-vaccines-could-soon...

    Nucleic acid vaccines use mRNA to give cells instructions on how to produce a desired protein. Libre de Droit/iStock via Getty ImagesThe two most successful coronavirus vaccines developed in the U ...

  6. mRNA vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MRNA_vaccine

    An mRNA vaccine is a type of vaccine that uses a copy of a molecule called messenger RNA (mRNA) to produce an immune response. [1] The vaccine delivers molecules of antigen-encoding mRNA into cells, which use the designed mRNA as a blueprint to build foreign protein that would normally be produced by a pathogen (such as a virus) or by a cancer ...

  7. Viral vector vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_vector_vaccine

    Viral vector vaccines enable antigen expression within cells and induce a robust cytotoxic T cell response, unlike subunit vaccines which only confer humoral immunity. [7] [17] In order to transfer a nucleic acid coding for a specific protein to a cell, the vaccines employ a variant of a virus as its vector.

  8. No, DNA fragments in COVID-19 vaccines aren't linked to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/no-dna-fragments-covid-19...

    Fears of genes being altered by the residual DNA fragments in COVID-19 vaccines don't stand up to the science.

  9. Subunit vaccine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subunit_vaccine

    A subunit vaccine is a vaccine that contains purified parts of the pathogen that are antigenic, or necessary to elicit a protective immune response. [1] [2] Subunit vaccine can be made from dissembled viral particles in cell culture or recombinant DNA expression, [3] in which case it is a recombinant subunit vaccine.