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Jay A. Berzofsky, Jeffrey D. Ahlers, John Janik, John Morris, SangKon Oh, Masaki Terabe, Igor M. Belyakov
Published in Volume 114, Issue 4
J Clin Invest. 2004; 114(4):450–462 doi:10.1172/JCI22674
Abstract | Full text | PDF | Supplemental material
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Figure 3

Vaccination against HPV infection using genotype-specific HPV L1 VLPs. Recombinant HPV-16 or HPV-18 L1 capsid protein made in yeast or baculovirus-infected insect cells self-assembles to form VLPs that are very potent at inducing neutralizing antibodies but are not infectious because they lack any viral nucleic acid. Such VLP vaccines show promise for prevention of HPV infection and HPV-associated cervical cancer. Depicted within the vaccinated subject are dendritic cells that present antigen to helper T cells (blue) and B cells (pink), which induces the B cells to become plasma cells (shown as ellipses). Plasma cells then generate antibodies (red) capable of neutralizing the virus.