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Historical Bibliography Updated: June 16, 2026

COVID-19 vaccine development and a potential nanomaterial path forward.

Publication Details

Nature Nanotechology, 15, 646-655. 2020 CE.

Published 15 July 2020. Order of authorship in original publication: Shin, Shukla, Chung....Steinmetz. Probably the first publication on the type of nanotechnology involved in production of the Moderna and Pfizer mRNA vaccines for Covid-19 — vaccines developed within unprecedented short periods of time and manufactured on unprecedented scale.

"Abstract

"The COVID-19 pandemic has infected millions of people with no clear signs of abatement owing to the high prevalence, long incubation period and lack of established treatments or vaccines. Vaccines are the most promising solution to mitigate new viral strains. The genome sequence and protein structure of the 2019-novel coronavirus (nCoV or SARS-CoV-2) were made available in record time, allowing the development of inactivated or attenuated viral vaccines along with subunit vaccines for prophylaxis and treatment. Nanotechnology benefits modern vaccine design since nanomaterials are ideal for antigen delivery, as adjuvants, and as mimics of viral structures. In fact, the first vaccine candidate launched into clinical trials is an mRNA vaccine delivered via lipid nanoparticles. To eradicate pandemics, present and future, a successful vaccine platform must enable rapid discovery, scalable manufacturing and global distribution. Here, we review current approaches to COVID-19 vaccine development and highlight the role of nanotechnology and advanced manufacturing."

(Thanks to Juan Weiss for this reference and its interpretation.)

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#13484
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/15758
Author Bio Linkiem.ucsd.edu ↗
External URLcovid19-vaccine-development-and-a-potential-nanomaterial-path-forward