Newswise, September 2, 2015 – Vaccines to protect
against an avian influenza pandemic as well as seasonal flu may be mass
produced more quickly and efficiently using technology described today (Sept.
2) by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the journal Nature
Communications.
The new method for making flu vaccines using cell
culture was devised using a type of research that has since been paused by the
federal government, which is formulating regulations for how some viruses can
be manipulated.
The finding emphasizes the value of such research, says
Yoshihiro Kawaoka, the professor of pathobiological sciences whose group
performed the work.
Currently, most flu vaccines are manufactured using
fertilized chicken eggs as crucibles to grow vaccine viruses — viruses that are
a good match for anticipated seasonal or pandemic flu strains.
Flu viruses are
grown in the eggs, deactivated with chemicals, and purified to create the raw
material for a vaccine.
However, because avian influenza can strike the
flocks used to produce the millions of eggs required worldwide to make
vaccines, serious outbreaks of avian flu could impede vaccine production.
New seasonal flu vaccines must be produced each
year. Vaccines to protect against more worrisome potential pandemic strains of
avian influenza are mass produced and stockpiled every few years based on
surveillance of the ever-evolving strains of avian flu circulating in fowl
worldwide.
Another key drawback to the use of chicken eggs is
that the antigenic qualities of the vaccine virus, chosen to be as close a
match as possible for an anticipated strain of flu, can change during
incubation.
The result is a less effective vaccine, such as the one widely used
for the 2014-15 flu season, which was less effective due to changes in the
circulating virus itself as well as antigenic changes to the vaccine virus
propagated in eggs. Moreover, the new technology promises vaccines that do not
pose a problem for those who are allergic to eggs.
Technology to produce flu vaccines using mammalian
cell cultures already exists, but in its current form is less efficient than
making vaccines in eggs.
The new high-yield method was devised by Kawaoka’s
group before the federal government imposed a moratorium on such work in
October 2014.
Contributing significantly to the work was Jihui Ping, a research
scientist in the UW-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine.
“Depending on the strain, we can get between a
twofold and tenfold increase in production using mammalian cells,” Kawaoka
says. “Even a twofold increase is substantial for vaccine production.”
In addition to sidestepping the limitations of
egg-based vaccine production, the technology is potentially more nimble as
vaccine production can be altered or ramped up more easily.
“You can scale up
cell-based vaccine production very quickly,” explains Kawaoka, one of the
world’s foremost experts on influenza.
The new technology hinges on viruses engineered to
replicate more efficiently in mammalian cells. By looking for genetic mutations
that foster more efficient growth in cells and building those systematically
into a backbone vaccine virus, the Wisconsin group was able to produce the
high-yield vaccine viruses.
“We simply looked for strains that grow well in
mammalian cells and picked those mutations that contribute to high yield,”
Kawaoka explains.
A patent for the new high-yield vaccine technology
is being sought by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF).
Commercialization of the new method for making flu vaccines could help fuel a switch
from egg-based vaccine production, according to Kawaoka.
“Existing strains of flu vaccine virus don’t grow
well in cells and there is only one company in the United States currently
using cell-based production methods,” notes Kawaoka.
“But there is a trend
toward cell-based production and we think this work can contribute to that.”
The study was supported by grants from the National
Institutes of Health; WARF; the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture,
Sports, Science and Technology; and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
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