Moving the Needle provides quarterly updates from PATH's Center for Vaccine Innovation and Access (CVIA) on our vaccine development efforts, as well as related supporting work, such as developing human challenge models, building capacity of developing - country vaccine manufacturers, and evaluating new adjuvants and other
novel vaccine technologies.
Novel vaccine technologies are critical to improving the public health response to infectious disease threats that continually emerge and re-emerge, according to scientists at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part...
Not exact matches
«We are honored to receive this award which underscores the unique value of our
technology platform and its game changing potential to make
novel vaccines for important human diseases.»
Ingo Potrykus at the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology is engineering a
novel strain of rice fortified with extra iron and vitamin A. Charles Arntzen, president of the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University, is working on perhaps the most ambitious genetically engineered food of all: an edible
vaccine.
Those selected for funding range from an antibacterial coating for orthopedic implants to a
novel nano -
vaccine technology to a potential next - generation cancer therapeutic.
There her research focused on inventing molecular, bead and array - based approaches to enable
novel vaccine discovery against infectious and chronic diseases At the University of Texas Southwestern Medical she pursued
technologies that became the basis of a Texas biotechnology company that was ultimately acquired by MacroGenics, Inc..
Research & Development IAVI worked with the Japanese biotech company DNAVEC, based in Tsukuba City, to jointly develop an AIDS
vaccine candidate based on its
novel Sendai vector
technology.
Flublok's
novel manufacturing
technology allows for production of large quantities of the influenza virus protein, hemagglutinin (HA)-- the active ingredient in all inactivated influenza
vaccines that is essential for entry of the virus into cells in the body.