Vaccine
in sentence
824 examples of Vaccine in a sentence
We're also using synthetic biology to design a candidate
vaccine
for COVID-19.
We are repurposing the BCG vaccine, which had been used against TB for almost a century.
It's a live attenuated vaccine, and we're engineering it to express SARS-CoV-2 antigens, which should trigger the production of protective antibodies by the immune system.
Importantly, BCG is massively scalable and has a safety profile that's among the best of any reported
vaccine.
That’s why we need a new flu
vaccine
every year— the influenza virus mutates so quickly that new strains pop up constantly.
There’s never been an approved treatment or
vaccine
for a coronavirus.
This time, governments and communities around the world slow the spread of the virus to give research facilities time to produce a
vaccine.
Even if the pandemic officially ends before a
vaccine
is ready, the virus may reappear seasonally, so vaccines will continue to protect people.
I was all fight-or-flight back then, and holding me down for a simple
vaccine
took three or four adults, including my parents.
In the measure that you have the source code, as all of you know, you can change the source code, and you can reprogram life forms so that this little thingy becomes a vaccine, or this little thingy starts producing biomaterials, which is why DuPont is now growing a form of polyester that feels like silk in corn.
About 12 years ago, there was a story published, a horrible story, that linked the epidemic of autism to the measles, mumps and rubella
vaccine
shot.
Disastrous because here's a fact: The United States is one of the only countries in the world where the
vaccine
rate for measles is going down.
He just developed a rotavirus
vaccine
with a bunch of other people.
Because Paul made a
vaccine.
It's not just the loss of the
vaccine
that matters; it's the fact that those kids don't get vaccinated.
A
vaccine
would be a terrific thing, only they don't work yet.
It's a very difficult thing to make a
vaccine
for.
We have, at the Institute, ongoing funding now from NIH in a program with Novartis to try and use these new synthetic DNA tools to perhaps make the flu
vaccine
that you might get next year.
So when you see how long it took to get an H1N1
vaccine
out, we think we can shorten that process quite substantially.
In the
vaccine
area, Synthetic Genomics and the Institute are forming a new
vaccine
company because we think these tools can affect vaccines to diseases that haven't been possible to date, things where the viruses rapidly evolve, such with rhinovirus.
Until recently, we haven't had to know exactly how a
vaccine
worked.
Now, let's take a look at a video that we're debuting at TED, for the first time, on how an effective HIV
vaccine
might work.
Narrator: A
vaccine
trains the body in advance how to recognize and neutralize a specific invader.
Memory cells generated by the HIV
vaccine
are activated when they learn HIV is present from the front-line troops.
Without a vaccine, these responses would have taken more than a week.
It's also why in the spring, we have to make a best guess at which three strains are going to prevail the next year, put those into a single
vaccine
and rush those into production for the fall.
The
vaccine
effort though is really quite different.
Many thought that it was just impossible to make an AIDS vaccine, but today, evidence tells us otherwise.
The Thai results tell us we can make an AIDS vaccine, and the antibody findings tell us how we might do that.
This strategy, working backwards from an antibody to create a
vaccine
candidate, has never been done before in
vaccine
research.
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