Daily Press

Years of research behind vaccine developmen­t

- By Lauran Neergaard

How could scientists race out COVID-19 vaccines so fast without cutting corners?

A head start helped — over a decade of behindthe-scenes research that had new vaccine technology poised for a challenge as the coronaviru­s erupted.

“The speed is a reflection of years of work that went before,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert. “That’s what the public has to understand.”

Creating vaccines and having results from rigorous studies less than a year after the world discovered a never-before-seen disease is incredible, cutting years off normal developmen­t.

But the two U.S. frontrunne­rs are made in a way that promises speedier developmen­t may become the norm — especially if they prove to work long-term as well as early testing suggests.

“Abject giddiness,” is how Dr. C. Buddy Creech, a Vanderbilt University vaccine expert, described scientists’ reactions when separate studies showed the two candidates were about 95% effective.

“I think we enter into a golden age of vaccinolog­y by having these types of new technologi­es,” Creech said at a briefing of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Both shots — one made by Pfizer and BioNTech, the other by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health — are messenger RNA, or mRNA, vaccines, a new technology.

U.S. regulators are set to decide this month whether to allow emergency use, paving the way for rationed shots that will start with health workers and nursing home residents.

There have been nearly 68 million confirmed infections worldwide and more than 1.5 million deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Billions in company and government funding certainly sped up vaccine developmen­t — and the unfortunat­ely huge number of infections meant scientists didn’t have to wait long to learn the shots appeared to be working.

But l ong bef ore COVID-19 was on the radar, the groundwork was laid in large part by two different streams of research, one at the NIH and the other at the University of Pennsylvan­ia — and because scientists had learned a bit about other coronaviru­ses from prior SARS and MERS outbreaks.

“When the pandemic started, we were on a strong footing both in terms of the science” and experience handling mRNA, said Dr. Tal Zaks, chief medical officer of Massachuse­tts-based Moderna.

Traditiona­lly, making vaccines required growing viruses or pieces of viruses — often in giant vats of cells or, like most flu shots, in chicken eggs — and then purifying them before next steps in brewing shots.

The mRNA approach is radically different. It starts with a snippet of genetic code that carries instructio­ns for making proteins. Pick the right virus protein to target, and the body turns into a mini vaccine factory.

“Instead of growing up a virus in a 50,000-liter drum and inactivati­ng it, we could deliver RNA and our bodies make the protein, which starts the immune response,” said Penn’s Dr. Drew Weissman.

Fifteen years ago, Weissman’s lab was trying to harness mRNA to make a variety of drugs and vaccines.

But researcher­s found simply injecting the genetic code into animals caused harmful inflammati­on.

Weissman and a Penn colleague now at BioNTech, Katalin Kariko, figured out a tiny modificati­on to a

building block of lab-grown RNA that let it slip undetected past inflammati­on-triggering sentinels.

“They could essentiall­y make a stealth RNA,” said Pfizer chief scientific officer Dr. Philip Dormitzer.

Other researcher­s added a fat coating, called lipid nanopartic­les, that helped stealth RNA easily get inside cells and start production of the target protein.

Meanwhile at the NIH, Dr. Barney Graham’s team figured out the right target — how to use the aptly named “spike” protein that coats the coronaviru­s to properly prime the immune system.

The right design is critical. But it turns out the surface proteins that let viruses latch onto human cells are shape-shifters — rearrangin­g their form before and after they’ve fused into place. Brew a vaccine using the wrong shape and it won’t block infection.

“You could put the same molecule in one way and the same molecule in another way and get an en

tirely different response,” Fauci explained.

That was a discovery in 2013, when Graham, deputy director of NIH’s Vaccine Research Center, and colleague Jason McLellan were investigat­ing a decades-old failed vaccine against RSV, a childhood respirator­y illness.

They homed in on the right structure for an RSV protein and learned genetic tweaks that stabilized the protein in the correct shape for vaccine developmen­t. They went on to apply that lesson to other viruses, including researchin­g a vaccine for MERS, a COVID-19 cousin, although it hadn’t gotten far when the pandemic began.

“That’s what put us in a position to do this rapidly,” Graham told the AP in February before the NIH’s vaccine was first tested in people. “Once you have that atomic-level detail, you can engineer the protein to be stable.“

Likewise, Germany’s BioNTech in 2018 had partnered with New York-based

Pfizer to develop a more modern mRNA-based flu vaccine, giving both companies some early knowledge about how to handle the technology.

“This was all brewing. This didn’t come out of nowhere,” said Pfizer’s Dormitzer.

Last January, shortly after the new coronaviru­s was reported in China, BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin switched gears and used the same method to create a COVID-19 vaccine.

Moderna also was using mRNA to develop vaccines against other germs including the mosquito-borne Zika virus — research showing promise but that wasn’t moving rapidly since the Zika outbreak had fizzled.

Then at the NIH, Graham woke up Jan. 11 to see Chinese scientists had shared the genetic map of the new coronaviru­s. His team got to work on the right-shaped spike protein.

Days later, they sent Moderna that recipe — and the vaccine race was on.

 ?? TOM GRALISH/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Dr. Drew Weissman, a University of Pennsylvan­ia immunologi­st, helped develop the messenger RNA concept behind the coronaviru­s vaccine created by Pfizer and BioNTech.
TOM GRALISH/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Dr. Drew Weissman, a University of Pennsylvan­ia immunologi­st, helped develop the messenger RNA concept behind the coronaviru­s vaccine created by Pfizer and BioNTech.

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