Coronavirus: quest for mutant-quelling vaccines begins as multiple new variants run rampant
- The coronavirus has undergone several major mutations, pushing scientists to target multiple versions of the pathogen in a single shot
- Pfizer and Moderna have said they’re starting work on developing booster shots or other efforts to bolster their vaccines
“We cannot be complacent that we’ve got the vaccines we need and it’s just a matter of time to ending the pandemic – it’s not,” said Richard Hatchett, chief executive officer of the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, which has worked to accelerate development of Covid-19 inoculations. “We’re in a race with the virus and we’ve got to get ahead of it.”
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Britain snapped up huge Covid-19 vaccine supplies early and became the first Western country to approve a shot. Now it’s seeking to catch up with the outbreak and sustain its momentum in the next phase of the crisis, a difficult task as the virus runs rampant.
The government last week announced a pact with CureVac NV to tackle variants, pairing artificial intelligence to predict future mutations with messenger RNA technology that can rapidly generate new vaccines. After a once-promising partnership with Sichuan Clover Biopharmaceuticals ended and separate trials with Sanofi ran into delays, London-based GlaxoSmithKline is also working with CureVac on mutant-quelling vaccines.
At a meeting of ambassadors on Wednesday, countries including Malta and Germany urged the European Commission to ensure contracts with manufacturers cover sufficient batches if booster shots are needed, according to a cable seen by Bloomberg.
“The bad news with these particular variants, and the reason many of us are nervous, isn’t that the vaccines will suddenly not work,” Kinch said, “but that they will slowly become obsolete.”
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Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson have said they’re starting work on developing booster shots or other efforts to bolster their vaccines. AstraZeneca and partner Oxford aim to have a tweaked version tailored to new variants available by fall.
Another strategy involves including a variety of antigens, the molecules in the vaccine that provoke an immune response, Kinch said. Although the spike protein has proven to be a good target, other surface proteins in the virus’s envelope and membrane could turn out to be important, too.
“Vaccines based on the spike protein are the first out the door,” said Julian Hiscox, a coronavirus specialist and chair of infection and global health at the University of Liverpool. The next round could add the N – or nucleocapsid – protein, whose job is to bind viral RNA, he said. With both S and N proteins, “that’s almost job done,” he said.
Traditional methods that use the virus itself in a weakened or inactivated form and provide a broader choice of potential targets – like those used by some Chinese developers including Sinovac Biotech – could also play a more significant role, Kinch said.
CEPI, the Oslo-based group that has funded a number of Covid-19 vaccine programmes, has set a goal of developing “strain changes” within 100 days if needed, Hatchett said. Pfizer’s partner BioNTech has said that if their vaccine turns out to be ineffective against a new strain, they could, in theory, produce an updated shot targeting that variant within six weeks.
For years, multivalent flu vaccines targeting three or four versions of the pathogen have provided protection against multiple strains circling the globe. Glaxo and CureVac plan to rely on mRNA technology to develop a product that addresses multiple variants in one Covid-19 vaccine. If the work is successful, a vaccine could be ready next year.
That could still have a big impact given how many countries still lack access to vaccines, said Thomas Breuer, chief medical officer for Glaxo’s vaccines unit. One of the big flu vaccine suppliers, Glaxo is used to altering vaccines quickly, he said.
Following partnerships with the UK and Glaxo, CureVac has been approached by other governments, said Mariola Fotin-Mleczek, its chief technology officer.
“The virus will mutate further, and therefore we need to reinvest now,” she said.
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Some scientists, including a team at the University of Cambridge, are exploring vaccines that could protect against multiple coronaviruses to prepare for future pandemics. Backed by UK funding, the Cambridge group is developing technology that could be plugged into any platform to fight multiple variants and other coronaviruses, such as Middle East respiratory syndrome, or Mers. They’re planning to start human trials in the spring.
“We need to bring on the next generation that are going to work against not only these variants, but the next pandemic,” said Jonathan Heeney, the Cambridge professor leading the study.
As the work progresses, the pressure is rising. New strains could make it more difficult to achieve a sufficient level of immunity needed to get control of the virus, Hatchett said.
“Every responsible observer is concerned about what we’re seeing. We’re going to get an awful lot of mileage out of the vaccines that we have,” he said. “But we also need to be ready.”