Miami Herald (Sunday)

COVID-19 VACCINES COULD POSE THREAT TO WILD SHARKS

Researcher­s at University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School are concerned about shark squalene-derived components of COVID-19 coronaviru­s vaccines.

- BY BEN CONARCK bconarck@miamiheral­d.com

Science’s steady march to find a vaccine capable of ending the coronaviru­s pandemic may come at the expense of another species: sharks.

Miami shark researcher­s say they’re concerned about a key ingredient used to make vaccines more effective, squalene — an oily substance found in plants and even human skin — but is particular­ly concentrat­ed in shark livers.

The practice of using sharkderiv­ed squalene as a booster to stimulate a stronger immune response to a vaccine is not unique to the coronaviru­s vaccine. The compound has been shown to be safe and effective in millions of doses of vaccines, primarily in Europe, said Liza Merly, a shark immunologi­st at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheri­c Science.

“We don’t exactly know what it is about this oil that allows that to work the way it does,” Merly said.

But squalene in vaccines has been shown to create more robust immune responses, and there are a handful of COVID-19 vaccine candidates that use it for that purpose, most of them partnered with GlaxoSmith­Kline, which manufactur­es a squalene-derived component for vaccines.

If one of the vaccine candidates using that component proves to be effective, it could create a global demand for squalene that might threaten wild shark population­s, according to Shark Allies, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting wild sharks.

The nonprofit produced a crude estimate: It would take

about 500,000 sharks to produce squalene for the billions of vaccine doses needed to inoculate everyone on the planet twice. That spurred internatio­nal headlines and prompted push back from GSK, which has argued that the estimate is far too high.

But the company has declined to identify the source of its squalene, other than to say that it’s harvested from sharks that were fished for other purposes, and that is what worries shark experts.

Catherine Macdonald, a marine conservati­on biologist and ecologist at UM’s Rosenstiel School, calculated a more advanced estimate and arrived at a slightly lower projection of 360,000 sharks needed to produce enough squalene to power the billions of vaccine doses.

But Macdonald said the number matters less than the lack of transparen­cy in the shark-fishing industry, which is under-regulated. Shark fishing has been known to harm wild population­s, Macdonald said, primarily in search of fins, but also while hunting for squalene, which is commonly used in cosmetics.

A sudden spike in squalene demand would be a significan­t concern, she said, in part because the liver oil is more abundant in deep sea sharks that are vulnerable to overfishin­g.

Though GSK says it’s using sharks that were fished for other purposes, Macdonald said “asking for greater supply chain transparen­cy is still a reasonable thing to do.”

“Some fisheries associated with squalene production are targeting deep sea sharks,” Macdonald said. “... We know that deep sea environmen­ts are evolved with very low natural levels of disturbanc­e, so any time we are having meaningful effects on deep sea population­s, we know less about them, and we’re less able to detect the effects we’re having.”

WHY SHARKS?

Though squalene is plentiful in the natural world, sharks are a favored target for industries because it doesn’t take much effort to purify the substance out of shark livers.

“It’s easier and cheaper than if you wanted to get squalene from, say, olive oil,” said Merly, who did her doctoral work on the medicinal value, or lack thereof, of shark cartilage.

As part of her research, Merly discovered a widerangin­g realm of products that are derived from sharks.

“That’s why I know squalene so well,” she said. “But if you try to find out from these companies how they source these things, they are really reticent to tell you.”

There are sustainabl­e ways to harvest squalene from sharks, Merly said, such as taking it from dogfish sharks, which are actively fished and managed. Those methods have less of an environmen­tal impact than other shark species that are less abundant and targeted for squalene.

Merly said Scandinavi­an countries, in particular, have been known to fish for deep water sharks in order to obtain squalene. And Macdonald, the other UM shark researcher, said DNA from threatened shark species has been identified in cosmetic products using squalene, including products that claimed to be vegan.

Squalene is used in a wide range of cosmetics and skin care products, such as moisturize­rs, lipsticks, sunscreens, bath oils, foundation­s, eye makeup, body creams, etc.

Because of the lack of transparen­cy in the supply chain, Merly said, “you don’t want to incentiviz­e or add value to a dead shark if you don’t have to.”

“Shark cartilage has no value for human medicine, so it’s a bad thing,” Merly said. “In the case of squalene, it’s a little more complicate­d, because there is the potential for it to be useful in human medicine.”

The initial controvers­y over whether shark-derived squalene in COVID vaccines would result in the slaughter of half a million sharks did miss the nuance of the situation, said Stefanie Brendl, the founder and executive director of Shark Allies, the group that produced the estimate that led to the news coverage.

Brendl said she was hesitant to have Shark Allies weigh in on sharkderiv­ed squalene because she didn’t want to be seen as calling a crucial public health need into question. But the organizati­on, Brendl said, needed to “get ahead of a problem which could potentiall­y take us in a really bad direction.”

“Is this a hill we want to die on? Do we want to fight COVID vaccines when we have so many other problems? No,” Brendl said. “But we don’t want it to turn into another hill.”

Brendl’s group has identified Amyris, which makes a plant-derived squalene component for vaccines that would be regulated in the same way as sharkderiv­ed squalene by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, as a potential alternativ­e.

“We’ve tried to chip away at every excuse: It’s not different, it’s just as available, and with plants, you can grow it at whatever scale you want to grow it — it’s a secure supply chain,” Brendl said.

While GSK has maintained that the amount of squalene it would need to manufactur­e COVID vaccine doses is a “very small proportion of the animalderi­ved squalene used worldwide,” it also said it is “actively exploring the potential for alternativ­e sources of its raw materials when possible.”

“These efforts include exploratio­n of non-animalderi­ved sources of squalene for future use in the ... manufactur­ing process,” the company said in a statement.

Macdonald acknowledg­ed that she is not a vaccine expert but said she’s found no compelling reason why pharmaceut­ical companies can’t switch to plant-derived squalene, which she said is still lowcost, just as effective, and presents no additional regulatory hurdles.

Given the threats to marine environmen­ts from deep sea ocean ecosystems to Biscayne Bay, Macdonald said plant-derived squalene was a cause that should be easy to get behind.

“There aren’t that many times where I can look at a marine conservati­on problem and say, ‘Actually, this looks very solvable,’” she said.

IF YOU TRY TO FIND OUT FROM THESE COMPANIES HOW THEY SOURCE THESE THINGS, THEY ARE REALLY RETICENT TO TELL YOU.

Shark immunologi­st Liza Merly

 ?? TIM CALVER ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo provided by The Discovery Channel, Caribbean reef sharks are seen in Nassau, Bahamas.
TIM CALVER ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo provided by The Discovery Channel, Caribbean reef sharks are seen in Nassau, Bahamas.
 ?? JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP TNS ?? An Atlantic White Shark Conservanc­y boat and crew work to tag a Great White Shark in the waters off the shore in Cape Cod, Massachuse­tts.
JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP TNS An Atlantic White Shark Conservanc­y boat and crew work to tag a Great White Shark in the waters off the shore in Cape Cod, Massachuse­tts.

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