
SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine design enabled by prototype pathogen preparedness
Author(s) -
K.S. Corbett,
D.K. Edwards,
S.R. Leist,
O.M. Abiona,
S. Boyoglu-Barnum,
R.A. Gillespie,
S. Himansu,
A. Schäfer,
Cynthia T Ziwawo,
A.T. DiPiazza,
K.H. Din,
S.M. Elbashir,
C.A. Shaw,
A. Woods,
E.J. Fritch,
D.R. Martinez,
K.W. Bock,
M. Minai,
B.M. Nagata,
G.B. Hutchinson,
Kaiwen Wu,
C. Henry,
K. Bahl,
D. Garcia-Dominguez,
L.Z. Ma,
I. Renzi,
W.-P. Kong,
S.D. Schmidt,
L. Wang,
Y. Zhang,
E. Phung,
L.A. Chang,
R.J. Loomis,
N.E. Altaras,
E. Narayanan,
M. Metkar,
V. Presnyak,
C. Liu,
M.K. Louder,
W. Shi,
K. Leung,
E.S. Yang,
A. West,
K.L. Gully,
L.J. Stevens,
N. Wang,
D. Wrapp,
N.A. Doria-Rose,
G. Stewart-Jones,
H. Bennett,
G.S. Alvarado,
M.C. Nason,
T.J. Ruckwardt,
J.S. McLellan,
M.R. Denison,
J.D. Chappell,
I.N. Moore,
K.M. Morabito,
J.R. Mascola,
R.S. Baric,
A. Carfi,
B.S. Graham
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
carolina digital repository (university of north carolina at chapel hill)
Language(s) - Uncategorized
DOI - 10.17615/8kcg-bf57
Subject(s) - preparedness , pathogen , covid-19 , virology , computational biology , biology , medicine , immunology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , disease , political science , law