“…This is also consolidated by the fact that there is a number of clinical trials of prophylactic DNA vaccines for the prevention of various infectious diseases (NCT04591184, NCT01487876, NCT04445389, NCT01498718, etc.). The technique of developing an mRNA-based vaccine from the beginning to the step of commercialization comprises antigen selection, optimization (addition of immunogenic sequences), plasmid design and synthesis, plasmid transformation into competent bacterial cells, its amplification, extraction, purification, linearization, in vitro transcription of mRNA, purification, capping, packing of mRNA in an effective delivery system, in vitro validation of the antigen expression, in vivo analysis, and ultimately, clinical studies [ 39 , 40 ]. Notably, the DNA vaccine approach also consists of a similar procedure except for the in vitro transcription and other mRNA-related steps meaning that the manufacturing is simpler and time-saving [ 15 ].…”