Study of In vitro inactivation of rabies virus by hydrogen peroxide / Asmaa Ahmed Abdelghaffar ;Supervised Magdy Ali Amin , Amal Emad Eldin , Abeer A. Elhalim Boseila
Material type:
TextLanguage: English Publication details: Cairo : Asmaa Ahmed Abdelghaffar , 2015Description: 105 P. : charts , facsimiles ; 25cmOther title: - دراسة تثبيط فيروس داء الكلب باستخدام بيروكيد الهدروجين [Added title page title]
- Issued also as CD
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thesis
|
قاعة الرسائل الجامعية - الدور الاول | المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة | Cai01.08.06.M.Sc.2015.As.S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 01010110068296000 | ||
CD - Rom
|
مخـــزن الرســائل الجـــامعية - البدروم | المكتبة المركزبة الجديدة - جامعة القاهرة | Cai01.08.06.M.Sc.2015.As.S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 68296.CD | Not for loan | 01020110068296000 |
Thesis (M.Sc.) - Cairo University - Faculty of Pharmacy - Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Development of safe and protective vaccines against infectious pathogens remains a challenge. Inactivation of rabies virus is a critical step in the production of vaccines and other research reagents. Beta-propiolactone (ÝPL); the currently used inactivating agent for rabies virus is expensive and proved to be carcinogenic in animals. This study aimed to investigate the ability of hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) to irreversibly inactivate rabies virus without affecting its antigenicity and immunogenicity in pursuit of finding safe, effective and inexpensive alternative inactivating agents. H₂O₂ 3% rapidly inactivated a Vero cell adapted fixed rabies virus strain designated as FRV/K within two hours of exposure without affecting antigenicity or immunogenicity. No residual infectious virus was detected and the H₂O₂- inactivated vaccine proved to be safe and effective when compared with the same virus harvest inactivated with the classical inactivating agent (ÝPL). Mice immunized with H₂O₂-inactivated rabies virus produced sufficient level of antibodies and were protected when challenged with lethal CVS virus. These findings reinforce the idea that H₂O₂ can replace ÝPL as inactivating agent for rabies virus to reduce time and cost of inactivation process
Issued also as CD
There are no comments on this title.