Los Angeles Times

The quest for vaccine against all coronaviru­ses

- By Jonathan Wosen Wosen writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — SARS. MERS. COVID-19. Coronaviru­ses caused all three diseases, and scientists are betting other members of this viral family will cause new outbreaks.

But what if a single vaccine worked against all coronaviru­ses — past, present and future?

Researcher­s from San Diego to Boston are racing to turn that possibilit­y into a reality, and they just got some major help. La Jolla Institute for Immunology announced Thursday that Erica Ollmann Saphire, president of the organizati­on, won a threeyear, $2.6-million grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop a so-called pan-coronaviru­s vaccine.

“It’s a class of viruses that we know can cause global pandemics. And it’s something that we need to be prepared for,” Saphire said. “We’re trying to ward off the next pandemic.”

She’s part of a larger effort led by Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and joined by researcher­s at MIT, Massachuse­tts General Hospital and Boston University. Scientists in Boston are studying people who’ve been vaccinated or recovered from COVID-19, searching for immune responses with the potential to fight off a broad swath of coronaviru­ses.

For this strategy to work, researcher­s must identify parts of the viral surface that don’t change from one coronaviru­s to the next and train the immune system to go after these shared regions.

Saphire’s team will handle the design of the vaccine. Her group has figured out how to manufactur­e a version of the coronaviru­s’ spike protein — which latches onto human cells and lets the virus slip inside them — that closely mimics the shape of the spike on the actual virus.

That’s key because, for proteins, shape is everything. The millions of proteins in each human cell fold into intricate 3-D structures, a bit like works of origami.

Those shapes control what each protein does, and even slight changes affect how or if they work.

“If the protein is better structured, better folded and more stable, it will remain longer and stimulate the immune system longer,” Saphire said.

The full grant lasts five years, with additional funding to arrive in the fourth year. By that time, Saphire hopes to have a clearer sense of how a pan-coronaviru­s vaccine should be administer­ed. That means knowing how many doses people need, how far apart shots should be spaced and whether the vaccine should use proteins, RNA (like Pfizer’s and Moderna’s shots) or some other approach to spark immunity.

Plenty of other researcher­s are chasing the same goal. A 10-minute drive from Saphire’s lab, scientists at Scripps Research also are working toward a pan-coronaviru­s vaccine in partnershi­p with the Gates Foundation. Immunologi­st Dennis Burton is one of them, and he’s employing the same strategy his team has used to study HIV for decades, closely examining antibody responses for clues on how to reverse-engineer a vaccine that could spark broad and long-lasting protection.

Burton thinks a vaccine that truly works against all coronaviru­ses will be a tall order, and Saphire agrees.

But he says that a vaccine against the viruses responsibl­e for SARS and COVID-19 is more doable given that researcher­s have already found some antibodies in people that latch onto the viruses behind both diseases. There’s also evidence that previous exposure to the four seasonal coronaviru­ses that can cause the common cold helps against COVID-19, suggesting that a vaccine against these viruses and the novel coronaviru­s is also possible.

“How feasible it is depends on how broad you’re trying to make your vaccine, how many viruses you’re trying to do,” Burton said. “It’s a case of seeing how far you can push the envelope.”

 ?? Jamie Lu La Jolla Institute for Immunology ?? ERICA Ollmann Saphire, center, of the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, received a $2.6-million grant.
Jamie Lu La Jolla Institute for Immunology ERICA Ollmann Saphire, center, of the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, received a $2.6-million grant.

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