1.Adjuvant effects of saponins on animal immune responses.
Zahid Iqbal RAJPUT ; Song-hua HU ; Chen-wen XIAO ; Abdullah G ARIJO
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2007;8(3):153-161
Vaccines require optimal adjuvants including immunopotentiator and delivery systems to offer long term protection from infectious diseases in animals and man. Initially it was believed that adjuvants are responsible for promoting strong and sustainable antibody responses. Now it has been shown that adjuvants influence the isotype and avidity of antibody and also affect the properties of cell-mediated immunity. Mostly oil emulsions, lipopolysaccharides, polymers, saponins, liposomes, cytokines, ISCOMs (immunostimulating complexes), Freund's complete adjuvant, Freund's incomplete adjuvant, alums, bacterial toxins etc., are common adjuvants under investigation. Saponin based adjuvants have the ability to stimulate the cell mediated immune system as well as to enhance antibody production and have the advantage that only a low dose is needed for adjuvant activity. In the present study the importance of adjuvants, their role and the effect of saponin in immune system is reviewed.
Adjuvants, Immunologic
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pharmacology
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Animals
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Astragalus Plant
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ISCOMs
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pharmacology
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Immune System
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drug effects
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Oleanolic Acid
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analogs & derivatives
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Panax
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Sapogenins
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Saponins
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pharmacology
2.A Current Research Insight into Function and Development of Adjuvants.
Eun Soo SOHN ; Eunwha SON ; Suhkneung PYO
Immune Network 2004;4(3):131-142
In recent years, adjuvants have received much attention because of the development of purified subunit and synthetic vaccines which are poor immunogens and require adjuvants to evoke the immune response. Therefore, immunologic adjuvants have been developed and testing for most of this century. During the last years much progress has been made on development, isolation and chemical synthesis of alternative adjuvants such as derivatives of muramyl dipeptide, monophosphoryl lipid A, liposomes, QS-21, MF-59 and immunostimulating complexes (ISCOMS). Biodegradable polymer microspheres are being evaluated for targeting antigens on mucosal surfaces and for controlled release of vaccines with an aim to reduce the number of doses required for primary immunization. The most common adjuvants for human use today are aluminum hydroxide and aluminum phosphate. Calcium phosphate and oil emulsions have been also used in human vaccination. The biggest issue with the use of adjuvants for human vaccines is the toxicity and adverse side effects of most of the adjuvant formulations. Other problems with the development of adjuvants include restricted adjuvanticity of certain formulations to a few antigens, use of aluminum adjuvants as reference adjuvant preparations under suboptimal conditions, non-availability of reliable animal models, use of non-standard assays and biological differences between animal models and humans leading to the failure of promising formulations to show adjuvanticity in clinical trials. The availability of hundreds of different adjuvants has prompted a need for identifying rational standards for selection of adjuvant formulations based on safety and sound immunological principles for human vaccines. The aim of the present review is to put the recent findings into a broader perspective to facilitate the application of these adjuvants in general and experimental vaccinology.
Acetylmuramyl-Alanyl-Isoglutamine
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Adjuvants, Immunologic
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Aluminum
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Aluminum Hydroxide
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Calcium
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Emulsions
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Humans
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Immunization
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ISCOMs
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Lipid A
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Liposomes
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Microspheres
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Models, Animal
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Polymers
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Vaccination
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Vaccines
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Vaccines, Synthetic