Vaccines Against Malarial Diseases

Description:
The invention offered for licensing is in the field of use of vaccines for malaria. The invention provides gene sequences encoding an erythrocyte binding protein of a malaria pathogen for the expression of the erythrocyte binding protein. The codon composition of the synthetic gene sequences approximates the mammalian codon composition. The synthetic gene sequences are useful for incorporation into DNA vaccine vectors, for the incorporation into various expression vectors for production of malaria proteins, or both. The synthetic genes may be modified to avoid post-translational modification of the encoded protein in other hosts. Administration of the synthetic gene sequences, or the encoded protein, as an immunization agent is useful for induction of immunity against malaria, treatment of malaria, or both. The approach presented in this invention, i.e. vaccine that may block the binding of the malaria parasite and subsequent erythrocyte invasion, may work independently or in combination with other vaccines which are based on different mechanisms.
Patent Information:
For Information, Contact:
David (Po-Lung) Yang
Fellow
NIH Technology Transfer
301-496-2644
polung.yang@nih.gov
Inventors:
David Narum
Keywords:
DC2XXX
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GENES
Malaria
Malaria (Plasmodium sp.)
MALARIAL
Methods
proteins
SACGHS DNA Patent Initial Set
Synthetic
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