Skip to Content Skip to Search / Nav
+ Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in t...

Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in the development of an HIV vaccine.

Top
Australian researchers are trialling an HIV vaccine strategy that involves vaccinating with one vaccine type, and then boosting with another type to improve the protective response. CSIRO has developed technology for the 'boost' vaccine, in which a fowlpox virus is used as a 'taxi' to carry the active parts of the vaccine to the immune system.

Photographer : North Sullivan Photography

Libraries and tags

Actions

Embed Image

To embed this image on your own website, please copy and paste the following code.

<table style="border:1px solid;padding:2px; width:310px;" ><tr><td><a href="https://www.scienceimage.csiro.au/image/3384/"><img src="https://www.scienceimage.csiro.au/images/embed/300_0_CR3152.jpg" width="300" alt="Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in the development of an HIV vaccine." style="margin: 0 0 5px 0; border: 0px;"></a><br/><a href="https://www.scienceimage.csiro.au/image/3384/">Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in the development of an HIV vaccine.</a><br />by CSIRO</td></tr></table>
Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in the development of an HIV vaccine.
Rachel Amos extracts a key ingredient from chicken eggs in the development of an HIV vaccine.
by CSIRO

License Agreement Creative Commons Licence

By downloading this image, you agree to abide by the following terms.

Attribution - You must give the original author credit.

Download 1.28 Mb