Researchers have demonstrated the success of a vaccine against Zika virus. The vaccine was generated using a novel platform technology.
Verardi, a Brazilian native, was in Brazil visiting family in the summer of 2015 when the Zika outbreak first began to make waves and soon reached epidemic status.
Back in the United States, Verardi kept tabs on the Zika epidemic and its emerging connection to microcephaly, a serious birth defect that causes babies to be born with small heads and underdeveloped brains.
In October of that year, Verardi called then-Ph.D.-student Brittany Jasperse (CAHNR ’19) into his office and told her he wanted to apply their newly developed vaccine platform and start developing a vaccine for Zika virus.
Verardi and Jasperse were among the first researchers in the US to receive NIH funding to generate a vaccine against Zika virus, thanks to Verardi recognizing the significance of Zika virus early.
Modern advancements in genomic technology have expediated the vaccine development process. In the past, researchers needed to have access to the actual virus. Now just obtaining the genetic sequence of the virus can be sufficient to develop a vaccine, as was the case for the Zika vaccine Verardi and Jasperse developed, and the COVID-19 vaccines currently approved for emergency use in the United States and abroad.
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Materials provided by University of Connecticut. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.