UTMB Develops Universal Vaccine
Platform That’s Cheaper and Shelf Stable
Platform That’s Cheaper and Shelf Stable
October 1, 2018 -- GALVESTON, Texas – Researchers at The
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have developed a
less expensive way to produce vaccines that cuts the cost of vaccine production
and storage by 80 percent without decreasing safety or effectiveness. The
findings are currently available in EBioMedicine.
Vaccines are the most effective way to prevent and
eradicate infectious diseases. Currently, many vaccines have to be manufactured
in cell culture or eggs, which is expensive and carries the risk of
contaminations. In addition, most vaccines must be kept refrigerated during the
transportation from manufacturers to health care clinics. In tropical and
subtropical regions, such cold storage requirements could contribute to more
than 80 percent of the vaccine cost.
“The ability to eliminate cell culture or eggs and
cold storage will change the process of vaccine development,” said UTMB’s
Pei-Yong Shi, professor in the department of biochemistry and molecular
biology. “Importantly, this vaccine technology could potentially serve as a
universal platform for development of live-attenuated vaccines for many viral
pathogens.”
To achieve these goals, the UTMB team engineered a
live-attenuated Zika vaccine in the DNA form. Once the DNA is delivered into
our body, it launches the vaccine in our cells, leading to antibody production
and other protective immunity. With this production method, there is no need to
manufacture the vaccine in cell culture or eggs at factories. Because DNA
molecules are shelf stable, the vaccine will not expire at warm temperatures
and could be stockpiled at room temperature for years.
Using UTMB’s Zika vaccine as a model, the research
group showed that the DNA platform worked very efficiently in mice. After a
single low dose, the DNA vaccine protected mice from Zika virus infection,
mother-to-fetus transmission during pregnancy and male reproductive tract
infection and damage.
“This is the first study to demonstrate that,
after a single low dose, a DNA vaccine could induce saturated protective
immunity,” Shi said. “We will continue testing this promising Zika vaccine
platform and then apply the platform to other viruses.”
Other authors include UTMB’s Jing Zou, Xuping Xie,
Huanle Luo, Chao Shan, Antonio Muruato, Scott Weaver and Tian Wang.
https://www.utmb.edu/newsroom/article11934.aspx
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