Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Indian vaccine developmen­t to be backed by PM-CARES

RESEARCH Centre will decide over the next few days how to utilise ₹100 crore from the fund

- Anonna Dutt letters@hindustant­imes.com

The government has allocated ₹100 crores from the PM-CARES (Prime Minister’s Citizen Assistance and Relief in Emergency Situations) Fund to support the initiative to develop a vaccine against coronaviru­s (Covid-19).there are as many as 25 vaccine developmen­t initiative­s underway in India, across academic institutio­ns, industry, and start-ups, according to the Department of Biotechnol­ogy.

The allocation will be utilised under the supervisio­n of the Principal Scientific Advisor, K Vijayragha­van. “The allocation of ₹100 crores from PM-CARES fund was announced just yesterday; we will take a stand on how to utilise it within next couple of days. But definitely the support will be for a completely indigenous vaccine candidate,” said Dr Renu Swarup, secretary, department of biotechnol­ogy, the nodal agency for Covid-19 vaccine developmen­t effort in the Prime Minister’s Task Force.

At least 10 vaccine projects are getting support -- both monetary and regulatory – under the DBTBIRAC (Biotechnol­ogy Industry Research Assistance Council) consortium. It is unclear whether these projects will also be eligible for money from PM-CARES.

“These projects are already receiving support from BIRAC, besides it is too early to say whether this funding will go to any of them. Most of them have internatio­nal partnershi­ps. Apart from these 10 candidates, there are about fifteen others from different research groups. These are in different stages of developmen­t and are currently being evaluated by the committee to see which has come further along and make more sense,” said Dr Swarup.

Thus far, DBT-BIRAC has backed 70 proposals; it accepts applicatio­ns of a rolling basis. Of these 70 proposals, 10 are vaccine candidates, 34, diagnostic­s for developmen­t or scale-up,10, are therapeuti­c options, two are drug repurposin­g proposals, and 14 are preventive interventi­ons.

Some of the vaccine candidates being supported by the consortium include a next-generation MRNA vaccine candidate by Gennova and another by Christian Medical College, Vellore. These vaccines use genetic material of the virus to create immune response. Work on an intra-nasal vaccine by Indian Institute of Chemical Technology is also being supported by it.

Another vaccine candidate selected for funding has been developed by Bharat Biotech, which uses an inactivate­d rabies virus as the vector or transport of some genetic sequence of Sarscov-2 and produce an immune response.

Kiran Mazumdar-shaw, Chairperso­n of N-BRIC said: “This consortium is of immense national importance at a time of an unpreceden­ted global health emergency. This will enable us to synergise and optimise the latent capabiliti­es we possess across the pyramid of academic research labs, start-ups, MSMES and large enterprise to deliver innovative solutions at scale for India and the world.”

“To meet our biotech and biomedical needs, the country needs to be self-reliant for product manufactur­ing and also the components, reagents, resources across the product developmen­t chain, N-BRIC brings together academia, industry, start-ups and MSME to serve not just the country but the world,” said Swarup.

C-CAMP is a life sciences incubator supported by DBT. Its mandate is to enable cutting-edge life science research and innovation, and promote entreprene­urship.

We will take a stand on how to utilise it in next couple of days. But the support will be for an indigenous vaccine

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