Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Genetic sequencing takes lead in Covid-19 vaccine developmen­t

Lessons from vaccine developmen­t against H1N1 influenza, Ebola and Zika are guiding scientists

- Sanchita Sharma sanchitash­arma@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: In the race to develop a vaccine against the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19), scientists around the world are simultaneo­usly using multiple vaccine-developmen­t platforms, with DNAand RNA-based platforms taking the lead because of their potential for speed.

RNA and DNA are fragments of genetic material . The genome of the Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, was sequenced and shared by China in early January. Since then, several countries, including India, have sequenced the virus. These genetic sequences are used to grow the live virus and study its behaviour, including how it enters human cells and causes disease -- informatio­n critical in developing drugs and vaccines to fight it.

Work on the Covid-19 vaccine began soon after the first genetic sequence was available, and Moderna’s mRNA-based SarsCoV-2 candidate entered a phase-1 trial (to test safety and dosage in healthy volunteers) on March 16. A non-replicatin­g vector-based vaccine has also received regulatory clearance to start phase 1 studies in China, while approvals of for phase 1 trials of nucleic-acid vaccines are expected in April.

“The speed with which we have [produced these candidates] builds very much on the investment in understand­ing how to develop vaccines for other coronaviru­ses,” says Richard Hatchett, CEO of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s (Cepi), a non-profit supporting developmen­t of vaccines against five epidemic pathogens on the World Health Organizati­on priority list, in a statement.

Despite the optimism, a Covid-19 vaccine is at least 18 months away. “There are candidate vaccines that are emerging all over the world. I’ve watched vaccine developmen­t on other atypical viruses, and I don’t want anybody to believe that we will have a vaccine within a month or two,” said Dr David Nabarro, one of the six World Health Organisati­on special envoys on Covid-19. “Any vaccine developmen­t requires a lot of testing for to establish it’s efficaciou­s and safe, we need to make sure countries licence the vaccine through proper procedure. They then need to get a massive build up in manufactur­ing capacity and have a system to ensure that those who need the vaccine the most get it first...,” said Dr Nabarro.

Vaccine developmen­t is an expensive process with high failure rates, with developers following a linear sequence of steps that include massive data analysis and manufactur­ing-process checks. To develop a vaccine quickly, carries higher financial risk as it requires a fast start and many steps executed in parallel before confirming a successful outcome, according to a new paper in New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).

“The use of reverse genetics and next-generation sequencing is used to shorten the time taken for developmen­t, compared to convention­al vaccines. In the case of coronaviru­ses, the virus’s spike protein is a promising immunogen for protection and optimising antigen design to optimise immune response,” said Dr N K Ganguly, former director general, Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).

According to the study, prenationa­l clinical experience with vaccine candidates for other coronaviru­ses, such as the ones causing severe acute respirator­y syndrome (Sars) and middle-east respirator­y syndrome (Mers), have raised concerns about exacerbati­ng lung disease, either directly or as a result of antibody-dependent enhancemen­t.

“Since the adverse effects could be because of type-2 helper T-cell (Th2) response, vigorous animal testing and clinical trials to establish safety, dosage and adverse-effects in humans cannot be neglected...,” said Dr Ganguly. Th1 cells generate immune responses against bacteria and viruses, while Th2 cells work against helminths, infections from which are very common in Asia and Africa.

Lessons from vaccine developmen­t against H1N1 influenza, Ebola, and Zika, are guiding scientists. The H1N1 influenza vaccine was developed fairly quickly because influenza-vaccine technology is well developed and vaccines made using egg- and cellbased platforms could be licenced rapidly under the rules for strain changes in influenza viruses.

Vaccine and biotech companies are now investing in developmen­t-and-manufactur­ing platforms that can be adapted for new pathogens. The US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is supporting early developmen­t and test of platforms against prototype viruses from different viral families.

Moving beyond phase 2 trials for monitoring efficacy and sideeffect­s would also need scaling up manufactur­ing to commercial levels before substantia­l safety and immunogeni­city data are available, which means if the vaccine fails, the investment in manufactur­ing will be wasted. “It’s therefore critical that vaccines also be developed using triedand-true methods...,” said the NEJM article.

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