8,215 research outputs found
Polyhydroxyalkanoate beads as a particulate vaccine against Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Microbiology at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand
Listed in 2018 Dean's List of Exceptional ThesesStreptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis are the major causes of
pneumonia and meningitis, respectively, worldwide. Capsular polysaccharide-protein
vaccines (conjugate vaccines) provide protection against these diseases but not protection
against infections caused by serotypes and serogroups not included in these vaccines.
Proteins have been increasingly considered as antigens for vaccine development due to
their more structurally conserved composition when compared to capsular
polysaccharides. Proteins subunit vaccines are safe and protective; however, they have
limitations such as serotype-dependent immunity, and low immunogenicity of the
proteins, requiring adjuvant to be included in these formulations or delivery systems that
enhance the desired immune response. In addition, complex production procedures are
required, increasing production costs and therefore market prices making these vaccines
inaccessible for many people affected by these diseases. Recently, bacterial storage
polymer inclusions have been developed as protein antigen carriers.
Polyhydroxyalkanoate, in particular 3-polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) inclusions have been
successfully bioengineered to display antigens from pathogens like Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and Hepatitis C virus. These particulate vaccine candidates elicited both a
Th1 and Th2 immunity patterns combined with a protective immune response against
Mycobacterium bovis in mice.
This thesis focuses on the study of polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) beads properties as
a carrier/delivery system engineered to display antigens from extracellular bacteria. The
antigens Pneumococcal adhesin A, Pneumolysin (proteins) and 19F capsular
polysaccharide (CPS) from Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisserial adhesin A, factor
H binding protein (proteins) and serogroup C CPS from Neisseria meningitidis were
displayed on the PHB bead surface. These antigenic proteins were produced as fusion
proteins on the PHB bead surface, while the CPS was covalently attached by chemical
conjugation. Mice vaccinated with these PHB beads produced strong and antigen-specific
antibody levels. In addition, splenocytes from the same mice generated both IL-17A and
IFN-É£ production.
The antibodies elicited against antigenic pneumococcal proteins were able to
recognise the same protein in the context of an Streptococcus pneumoniae whole cell
lysate from more than six different strains, while antibodies produced after vaccination
with 19F CPS conjugate to PHB showed high opsonophagocytic titers against the
homologous strain. In the case of Neisseria meningitidis, bactericidal antibodies were
elicited in mice vaccinated with PHB beads displaying proteinaceous and CPS antigens.
Overall, this thesis shows that PHB as particulate vaccine candidate holds the
promise of a broadly protective vaccine that can be produced cost-effectively for
widespread application to prevent diseases caused by Neisseria meningitidis and
Streptococcus pneumoniae
S-matrix bootstrap for resonances
We study the -matrix element of a generic, gapped and
Lorentz invariant QFT in space time dimensions. We derive an analytical
bound on the coupling of the asymptotic states to unstable particles (a.k.a.
resonances) and its physical implications. This is achieved by exploiting the
connection between the S-matrix phase-shift and the roots of the S-matrix in
the physical sheet. We also develop a numerical framework to recover the
analytical bound as a solution to a numerical optimization problem. This later
approach can be generalized to spacetime dimensions.Comment: Minor typos corrected, matches published versio
Ideals of general forms and the ubiquity of the Weak Lefschetz property
Let be positive integers and let be an
ideal generated by general forms of degrees , respectively, in a
polynomial ring with variables. When all the degrees are the same we
give a result that says, roughly, that they have as few first syzygies as
possible. In the general case, the Hilbert function of has been
conjectured by Fr\"oberg. In a previous work the authors showed that in many
situations the minimal free resolution of must have redundant terms which
are not forced by Koszul (first or higher) syzygies among the (and hence
could not be predicted from the Hilbert function), but the only examples came
when . Our second main set of results in this paper show that further
examples can be obtained when . We also show that if
Fr\"oberg's conjecture on the Hilbert function is true then any such redundant
terms in the minimal free resolution must occur in the top two possible degrees
of the free module. Related to the Fr\"oberg conjecture is the notion of Weak
Lefschetz property. We continue the description of the ubiquity of this
property. We show that any ideal of general forms in has
it. Then we show that for certain choices of degrees, any complete intersection
has it and any almost complete intersection has it. Finally, we show that most
of the time Artinian ``hypersurface sections'' of zeroschemes have it.Comment: 24 page
Cohomological characterization of vector bundles on multiprojective spaces
We show that Horrock's criterion for the splitting of vector bundles on
\PP^n can be extended to vector bundles on multiprojective spaces and to
smooth projective varieties with the weak CM property (see Definition 3.11). As
a main tool we use the theory of -blocks and Beilinson's type spectral
sequences. Cohomological characterizations of vector bundles are also showed
On the intersection of ACM curves in \PP^3
Bezout's theorem gives us the degree of intersection of two properly
intersecting projective varieties. As two curves in P^3 never intersect
properly, Bezout's theorem cannot be directly used to bound the number of
intersection points of such curves. In this work, we bound the maximum number
of intersection points of two integral ACM curves in P^3. The bound that we
give is in many cases optimal as a function of only the degrees and the initial
degrees of the curves
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