Shrishti Singh, PhD

I help scientists and researchers commercialize their technologies in life sciences

Increasing vaccine production using pulsed ultrasound waves


Journal article


Jida Xing, Shrishti Singh, Yupeng Zhao, Yan Duan, Huining Guo, Chenxia Hu, A. Ma, Rajan George, J. Xing, Ankarao Kalluri, Isaac G. Macwan, P. Patra, Jie Chen
PloS one, 2017

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Xing, J., Singh, S., Zhao, Y., Duan, Y., Guo, H., Hu, C., … Chen, J. (2017). Increasing vaccine production using pulsed ultrasound waves. PloS One.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Xing, Jida, Shrishti Singh, Yupeng Zhao, Yan Duan, Huining Guo, Chenxia Hu, A. Ma, et al. “Increasing Vaccine Production Using Pulsed Ultrasound Waves.” PloS one (2017).


MLA   Click to copy
Xing, Jida, et al. “Increasing Vaccine Production Using Pulsed Ultrasound Waves.” PloS One, 2017.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{jida2017a,
  title = {Increasing vaccine production using pulsed ultrasound waves},
  year = {2017},
  journal = {PloS one},
  author = {Xing, Jida and Singh, Shrishti and Zhao, Yupeng and Duan, Yan and Guo, Huining and Hu, Chenxia and Ma, A. and George, Rajan and Xing, J. and Kalluri, Ankarao and Macwan, Isaac G. and Patra, P. and Chen, Jie}
}

Abstract

Vaccination is a safe and effective approach to prevent deadly diseases. To increase vaccine production, we propose that a mechanical stimulation can enhance protein production. In order to prove this hypothesis, Sf9 insect cells were used to evaluate the increase in the expression of a fusion protein from hepatitis B virus (HBV S1/S2). We discovered that the ultrasound stimulation at a frequency of 1.5 MHz, intensity of 60 mW/cm2, for a duration of 10 minutes per day increased HBV S1/S2 by 27%. We further derived a model for transport through a cell membrane under the effect of ultrasound waves, tested the key assumptions of the model through a molecular dynamics simulation package, NAMD (Nanoscale Molecular Dynamics program) and utilized CHARMM force field in a steered molecular dynamics environment. The results show that ultrasound waves can increase cell permeability, which, in turn, can enhance nutrient / waste exchange thus leading to enhanced vaccine production. This finding is very meaningful in either shortening vaccine production time, or increasing the yield of proteins for use as vaccines.


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