bioAffinity Technologies to Present at 2020 American Society of Cell Biology Meeting – Business Wire

SAN ANTONIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--bioAffinity Technologies, a privately held biotech company, today announced that its poster Meso-tetra (4-carboxyphenyl) porphyrin (TCPP) is incorporated into cancer cells by the CD320 receptor and clathrin mediated endocytosis will be presented during the session Cancer Therapy: Defining Therapeutic Targets and New Therapeutics at the American Society of Cell Biologys Cell Bio Virtual 2020 - An Online ASCB|EMBO Meeting Dec. 2-16, 2020.

The poster and an accompanying video presentation by bioAffinity Technologies Vice President of Research David Elzi, PhD, also will be available to conference participants for on-demand viewing from Dec. 2-23. Dr. Elzi will participate and present his research as part of a 45-minute panel discussion during the Cancer Therapy session on Monday, Dec. 14, at 1 p.m. Eastern time.

Porphyrins are known to exhibit high affinity for cancer. The fluorescent porphyrin TCPP is used to mark cancer and cancer-associated cells for detection by flow cytometry in bioAffinity Technologies CyPath Lung test, a non-invasive diagnostic for the early detection of lung cancer. The presence of cells with high TCPP uptake is one of several parameters that distinguish samples from cancer patients from those at high risk who are cancer-free. Dr. Elzi has conducted research into the biological mechanisms of action by which cancer cells preferentially take up TCPP. Research findings have furthered the Companys diagnostic applications and also led to discoveries that are being advanced by bioAffinity Technologies to develop cancer therapies that can selectively kill cancer without harm to healthy cells.

About bioAffinity Technologies, Inc.

bioAffinity Technologies, Inc. (www.bioaffinitytech.com) is a privately held company addressing the significant unmet need for non-invasive, early-stage cancer diagnosis and treatment. The Company develops proprietary in-vitro diagnostic tests and targeted cancer therapeutics using breakthrough technology that preferentially targets cancer cells. Research and optimization of its platform technology are conducted in bioAffinity Technologies laboratories at the University of Texas San Antonio. The Companys platform technology is being developed to diagnose, monitor and treat many cancers.

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bioAffinity Technologies to Present at 2020 American Society of Cell Biology Meeting - Business Wire

Staying in touch! – Science Codex

For our cells to assemble into tissues and whole organs, the extracellular ma-trix (ECM) as well as the integrins are required. The ECM forms a kind of extra-cellular protein meshwork, the integrins are surface proteins, which our cells use to attach to this extracellular support structure. How human cells balance attachment to versus detachment from the ECM is a yet unsolved question. The research team led by Professor Christof Hauck in the Department of Biolo-gy at the University of Konstanz, now identified a key enzyme, PPM1F, which regulates the integrins' detachment from the ECM. The results have been pub-lished in the online edition of the Journal of Cell Biology https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202001057.

The ECM mainly consists of a network of protein fibres such as collagen and other filamentous extracellular proteins. In order to adhere to this meshwork, nearly every human cell possesses surface proteins termed integrins. Integrins operate like mo-lecular carabiners that lock the cells to the network of collagen fibres or other ECM proteins and thus provide a strong focal point of attachment for the cell. However, cells in our body do not always stay in place, but sometimes need to migrate over long distances to their final destination - just think of immune cells that have to travel from the lymph node to a skin wound. As a solution, nature provided integrins with special features.

Like a sailor in the ship's rigging

Integrins are peculiar, because they can be repeatedly folded over and extended: When folded over, integrins cannot connect to the ECM, as the carabiner is buried. Upon extension of the integrin, the carabiner is exposed and can lock the cell to the ECM. Interestingly, cells can extend integrins at the front end of the cell, while they fold over their integrins at the rear and detach from the ECM at these positions. Cy-cles of integrin-mediated "gripping and let loose" allow cells to move in the protein meshwork of the extracellular matrix like a sailor climbs in the ship's rigging. Integrins consist of two parts, the - and the -subunit. Both subunits traverse the cell mem-brane, so that a small part of the protein is inside the cell, but the larger portion, the actual carabiner, is outside of the cell. It has been known for some time that the ex-tension of the integrin is initiated by the integrin -subunit: In particular, the protein talin initially binds to the intracellular part of the -subunit and triggers integrin exten-sion and thus the activation of the carabiner.

Without phosphorylation the carabiner hook remains buried

Tanja Grimm and Nina Dierdorf, doctoral researchers at the Konstanz Research School Chemical Biology have discovered that the -subunit is being marked for talin binding by a small chemical modification, a so-called phosphorylation. This phos-phorylation works like a switch: Upon phosphorylation, talin can bind and the integrin is extended. If phosphorylation does not take place or if this position in the integrin is mutated, talin does not associate and the carabiner remains buried. Consequently, the cells lose their grip. Moreover, the doctoral researchers now showed for the first time that a single enzyme is responsible for reversing the phosphorylation of the integrin -subunit: the protein phosphatase PPM1F. This enzyme can remove the phosphorylation and thus trigger the integrins to fold over. The PPM1F-regulated "phosphorylation switch" in the integrin seems to be essential, because in the absence of PPM1F, embryonic development, when different cell types have to arrange themselves into functioning tissues, terminates prematurely. Isolated cells, in which the PPM1F gene is disrupted, show enhanced attachment to the extracellular matrix and can hardly move, as they are unable to release integrin-based matrix contacts.

Does less cell adhesion allow uncontrolled migration?

The researchers now hope that this knowledge can be used in the future to specifi-cally control PPM1F activity and thus the functionality of integrins. In some tumour cells, this phosphatase appears to be particularly abundant, and the resulting reduced adhesion of such tumour cells could be one of the reasons, why they are able to leave the primary tumour and form metastases at distant body sites.

"In the next step, we want to learn how to manipulate the phosphorylation switch and thus the function of integrins," says Tanja Grimm, first author of the study. "We might be able to specifically influence integrin-dependent processes in our body, from im-mune cell movement to tumour metastasis. With these novel findings we might help our cells to firmly stay in touch with their surrounding and prevent them straying away for the worse".

Key facts:

Original publication: Grimm, T.M., Dierdorf, N.I., Betz, K., Paone, C., Hauck, C.R. (2020): PPM1F controls integrin activity via a conserved phospho-switch, Journal of Cell Biology (2020) 219 (12): e202001057; published online on 29 November 2020. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202001057

The team led by Professor Christof Hauck, cell biologist at the Department of Biology, University of Konstanz, discovered new details about the regulation of cell adhesion and cell migration

The phosphatase PPM1F is key for releasing integrin-based contacts between human cells and the extracellular matrix

Research was conducted in the context of the Collaborative Research Centre (SFB 969) "Chemical and Biological Principles of Cellular Proteostasis", which is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG)

Tanja Grimm and Nina Dierdorf, the lead authors of the study, received schol-arships of the Konstanz Research School Chemical Biology (KoRS-CB).

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Staying in touch! - Science Codex

Epidermal Growth Factor in the CNS: A Beguiling Journey from Integrated Cell Biology to Multiple Sclerosis. An Extensive Translational Overview -…

This article was originally published here

Cell Mol Neurobiol. 2020 Nov 5. doi: 10.1007/s10571-020-00989-x. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

This article reviews the wealth of papers dealing with the different effects of epidermal growth factor (EGF) on oligodendrocytes, astrocytes, neurons, and neural stem cells (NSCs). EGF induces the in vitro and in vivo proliferation of NSCs, their migration, and their differentiation towards the neuroglial cell line. It interacts with extracellular matrix components. NSCs are distributed in different CNS areas, serve as a reservoir of multipotent cells, and may be increased during CNS demyelinating diseases. EGF has pleiotropic differentiative and proliferative effects on the main CNS cell types, particularly oligodendrocytes and their precursors, and astrocytes. EGF mediates the in vivo myelinotrophic effect of cobalamin on the CNS, and modulates the synthesis and levels of CNS normal prions (PrPCs), both of which are indispensable for myelinogenesis and myelin maintenance. EGF levels are significantly lower in the cerebrospinal fluid and spinal cord of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), which probably explains remyelination failure, also because of the EGF marginal role in immunology. When repeatedly administered, EGF protects mouse spinal cord from demyelination in various experimental models of autoimmune encephalomyelitis. It would be worth further investigating the role of EGF in the pathogenesis of MS because of its multifarious effects.

PMID:33151415 | DOI:10.1007/s10571-020-00989-x

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Epidermal Growth Factor in the CNS: A Beguiling Journey from Integrated Cell Biology to Multiple Sclerosis. An Extensive Translational Overview -...

Eureka Therapeutics Appoints Nobel Laureate Randy Schekman, Ph.D. to its Scientific Advisory Board – BioSpace

Nov. 9, 2020 13:00 UTC

EMERYVILLE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Eureka Therapeutics, Inc., a clinical stage biotechnology company developing novel T cell therapies to treat solid tumors, announced today that Randy Schekman, Ph.D., has been appointed to its Scientific Advisory Board. Dr. Schekman shared the 2013 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his ground-breaking work on cell membrane vesicle trafficking. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Dr. Schekman is a true visionary in the field of medicine, and his scientific research has enabled the production of one third of the worlds supply of insulin and the entire worlds supply of hepatitis B vaccines, said Dr. Cheng Liu, President and CEO of Eureka Therapeutics. I have known Randy for more than 20 years, and his scientific leadership and expertise will be invaluable as we advance our anti-AFP ARTEMIS ET140203 clinical trial in adult patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the predominant type of liver cancer.

The approaches Eureka has taken for undruggable diseases using TCR mimic antibodies and its proprietary ARTEMIS T cell platform are entirely novel and quite powerful, said Dr. Schekman. I look forward to working with the Eureka team and its other distinguished SAB members, on advancing its pipeline of therapies to address unmet medical needs in oncology.

In addition to being awarded the Nobel Prize, Dr. Schekman is the recipient of numerous prizes, including the Lewis S. Rosenstiel Award in basic biomedical science, the Gairdner International Award, the Amgen Award of the Protein Society, the Albert Lasker Award in Basic Medical Research, the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize of Columbia University, the Dickson Prize in Medicine from the University of Pittsburgh, the Massry Prize, the E.B Wilson Award of the American Society of Cell Biology, the Kornberg-Berg lifetime achievement award from Stanford Medical School and the Otto Warburg Prize of the German Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, a Foreign Associate of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei and a Foreign Associate of the Royal Society of London.

With the appointment of Dr. Schekman, Eurekas Scientific Advisory Board consists of five members, including Dr. Stephan Grupp, Section Chief of the Cellular Therapy and Transplant Section at Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia; Dr. Cameron Turtle, Professor and Anderson Family Endowed Chair for Immunotherapy at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center; Dr. David Scheinberg, Director, Experimental Therapeutics Center at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center; and Dr. Yuman Fong, Chair and Professor of the Department of Surgery Surgical Oncology at City of Hope.

ABOUT EUREKA THERAPEUTICS, INC.

Eureka Therapeutics, Inc. is a privately held clinical stage biotechnology company focused on developing novel T cell therapies to treat cancers. Its core technology centers around its proprietary ARTEMIS cell receptor platform and E-ALPHA antibody discovery platform for the discovery and development of potentially safer and more effective T cell therapies for the treatment of solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. ET140203, the Companys lead asset, is currently in a Phase I/II US multicenter clinical trial in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Eureka Therapeutics, Inc. is headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information on Eureka, please visit http://www.eurekatherapeutics.com.

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Eureka Therapeutics Appoints Nobel Laureate Randy Schekman, Ph.D. to its Scientific Advisory Board - BioSpace

The story of mRNA: From a loose idea to a tool that may help curb Covid – STAT

ANDOVER, Mass. The liquid that many hope could help end the Covid-19 pandemic is stored in a nondescript metal tank in a manufacturing complex owned by Pfizer, one of the worlds biggest drug companies. There is nothing remarkable about the container, which could fit in a walk-in closet, except that its contents could end up in the worlds first authorized Covid-19 vaccine.

Pfizer, a 171-year-old Fortune 500 powerhouse, has made a billion-dollar bet on that dream. So has a brash, young rival just 23 miles away in Cambridge, Mass. Moderna, a 10-year-old biotech company with billions in market valuation but no approved products, is racing forward with a vaccine of its own. Its new sprawling drug-making facility nearby is hiring workers at a fast clip in the hopes of making history and a lot of money.

In many ways, the companies and their leaders couldnt be more different. Pfizer, working with a little-known German biotech called BioNTech, has taken pains for much of the year to manage expectations. Moderna has made nearly as much news for its stream of upbeat press releases, executives stock sales, and spectacular rounds of funding as for its science.

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Each is well-aware of the other in the race to be first.

But what the companies share may be bigger than their differences: Both are banking on a genetic technology that has long held huge promise but has so far run into biological roadblocks. It is called synthetic messenger RNA, an ingenious variation on the natural substance that directs protein production in cells throughout the body. Its prospects have swung billions of dollars on the stock market, made and imperiled scientific careers, and fueled hopes that it could be a breakthrough that allows society to return to normalcy after months living in fear.

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Both companies have been frequently name-checked by President Trump. Pfizer reported strong, but preliminary, data on Monday, and Moderna is expected to follow suit soon with a glimpse of its data. Both firms hope these preliminary results will allow an emergency deployment of their vaccines millions of doses likely targeted to frontline medical workers and others most at risk of Covid-19.

There are about a dozen experimental vaccines in late-stage clinical trials globally, but the ones being tested by Pfizer and Moderna are the only two that rely on messenger RNA.

For decades, scientists have dreamed about the seemingly endless possibilities of custom-made messenger RNA, or mRNA.

Researchers understood its role as a recipe book for the bodys trillions of cells, but their efforts to expand the menu have come in fits and starts. The concept: By making precise tweaks to synthetic mRNA and injecting people with it, any cell in the body could be transformed into an on-demand drug factory.

But turning scientific promise into medical reality has been more difficult than many assumed. Although relatively easy and quick to produce compared to traditional vaccine-making, no mRNA vaccine or drug has ever won approval.

Even now, as Moderna and Pfizer test their vaccines on roughly 74,000 volunteers in pivotal vaccine studies, many experts question whether the technology is ready for prime time.

I worry about innovation at the expense of practicality, Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine and an authority on vaccines, said recently. The U.S. governments Operation Warp Speed program, which has underwritten the development of Modernas vaccine and pledged to buy Pfizers vaccine if it works, is weighted toward technology platforms that have never made it to licensure before.

Whether mRNA vaccines succeed or not, their path from a gleam in a scientists eye to the brink of government approval has been a tale of personal perseverance, eureka moments in the lab, soaring expectations and an unprecedented flow of cash into the biotech industry.

It is a story that began three decades ago, with a little-known scientist who refused to quit.

Before messenger RNA was a multibillion-dollar idea, it was a scientific backwater. And for the Hungarian-born scientist behind a key mRNA discovery, it was a career dead-end.

Katalin Karik spent the 1990s collecting rejections. Her work, attempting to harness the power of mRNA to fight disease, was too far-fetched for government grants, corporate funding, and even support from her own colleagues.

It all made sense on paper. In the natural world, the body relies on millions of tiny proteins to keep itself alive and healthy, and it uses mRNA to tell cells which proteins to make. If you could design your own mRNA, you could, in theory, hijack that process and create any protein you might desire antibodies to vaccinate against infection, enzymes to reverse a rare disease, or growth agents to mend damaged heart tissue.

In 1990, researchers at the University of Wisconsin managed to make it work in mice. Karik wanted to go further.

The problem, she knew, was that synthetic RNA was notoriously vulnerable to the bodys natural defenses, meaning it would likely be destroyed before reaching its target cells. And, worse, the resulting biological havoc might stir up an immune response that could make the therapy a health risk for some patients.

It was a real obstacle, and still may be, but Karik was convinced it was one she could work around. Few shared her confidence.

Every night I was working: grant, grant, grant, Karik remembered, referring to her efforts to obtain funding. And it came back always no, no, no.

By 1995, after six years on the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, Karik got demoted. She had been on the path to full professorship, but with no money coming in to support her work on mRNA, her bosses saw no point in pressing on.

She was back to the lower rungs of the scientific academy.

Usually, at that point, people just say goodbye and leave because its so horrible, Karik said.

Theres no opportune time for demotion, but 1995 had already been uncommonly difficult. Karik had recently endured a cancer scare, and her husband was stuck in Hungary sorting out a visa issue. Now the work to which shed devoted countless hours was slipping through her fingers.

I thought of going somewhere else, or doing something else, Karik said. I also thought maybe Im not good enough, not smart enough. I tried to imagine: Everything is here, and I just have to do better experiments.

In time, those better experiments came together. After a decade of trial and error, Karik and her longtime collaborator at Penn Drew Weissman, an immunologist with a medical degree and Ph.D. from Boston University discovered a remedy for mRNAs Achilles heel.

The stumbling block, as Kariks many grant rejections pointed out, was that injecting synthetic mRNA typically led to that vexing immune response; the body sensed a chemical intruder, and went to war. The solution, Karik and Weissman discovered, was the biological equivalent of swapping out a tire.

Every strand of mRNA is made up of four molecular building blocks called nucleosides. But in its altered, synthetic form, one of those building blocks, like a misaligned wheel on a car, was throwing everything off by signaling the immune system. So Karik and Weissman simply subbed it out for a slightly tweaked version, creating a hybrid mRNA that could sneak its way into cells without alerting the bodys defenses.

That was a key discovery, said Norbert Pardi, an assistant professor of medicine at Penn and frequent collaborator. Karik and Weissman figured out that if you incorporate modified nucleosides into mRNA, you can kill two birds with one stone.

That discovery, described in a series of scientific papers starting in 2005, largely flew under the radar at first, said Weissman, but it offered absolution to the mRNA researchers who had kept the faith during the technologys lean years. And it was the starter pistol for the vaccine sprint to come.

And even though the studies by Karik and Weissman went unnoticed by some, they caught the attention of two key scientists one in the United States, another abroad who would later help found Moderna and Pfizers future partner, BioNTech.

Derrick Rossi, a native of Toronto who rooted for the Maple Leafs and sported a soul patch, was a 39-year-old postdoctoral fellow in stem cell biology at Stanford University in 2005 when he read the first paper. Not only did he recognize it as groundbreaking, he now says Karik and Weissman deserve the Nobel Prize in chemistry.

If anyone asks me whom to vote for some day down the line, I would put them front and center, he said. That fundamental discovery is going to go into medicines that help the world.

But Rossi didnt have vaccines on his mind when he set out to build on their findings in 2007 as a new assistant professor at Harvard Medical School running his own lab.

He wondered whether modified messenger RNA might hold the key to obtaining something else researchers desperately wanted: a new source of embryonic stem cells.

In a feat of biological alchemy, embryonic stem cells can turn into any type of cell in the body. That gives them the potential to treat a dizzying array of conditions, from Parkinsons disease to spinal cord injuries.

But using those cells for research had created an ethical firestorm because they are harvested from discarded embryos.

Rossi thought he might be able to sidestep the controversy. He would use modified messenger molecules to reprogram adult cells so that they acted like embryonic stem cells.

He asked a postdoctoral fellow in his lab to explore the idea. In 2009, after more than a year of work, the postdoc waved Rossi over to a microscope. Rossi peered through the lens and saw something extraordinary: a plate full of the very cells he had hoped to create.

Rossi excitedly informed his colleague Timothy Springer, another professor at Harvard Medical School and a biotech entrepreneur. Recognizing the commercial potential, Springer contacted Robert Langer, the prolific inventor and biomedical engineering professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

On a May afternoon in 2010, Rossi and Springer visited Langer at his laboratory in Cambridge. What happened at the two-hour meeting and in the days that followed has become the stuff of legend and an ego-bruising squabble.

Langer is a towering figure in biotechnology and an expert on drug-delivery technology. At least 400 drug and medical device companies have licensed his patents. His office walls display many of his 250 major awards, including the Charles Stark Draper Prize, considered the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for engineers.

As he listened to Rossi describe his use of modified mRNA, Langer recalled, he realized the young professor had discovered something far bigger than a novel way to create stem cells. Cloaking mRNA so it could slip into cells to produce proteins had a staggering number of applications, Langer thought, and might even save millions of lives.

I think you can do a lot better than that, Langer recalled telling Rossi, referring to stem cells. I think you could make new drugs, new vaccines everything.

Langer could barely contain his excitement when he got home to his wife.

This could be the most successful company in history, he remembered telling her, even though no company existed yet.

Three days later Rossi made another presentation, to the leaders of Flagship Ventures. Founded and run by Noubar Afeyan, a swaggering entrepreneur, the Cambridge venture capital firm has created dozens of biotech startups. Afeyan had the same enthusiastic reaction as Langer, saying in a 2015 article in Nature that Rossis innovation was intriguing instantaneously.

Within several months, Rossi, Langer, Afeyan, and another physician-researcher at Harvard formed the firm Moderna a new word combining modified and RNA.

Springer was the first investor to pledge money, Rossi said. In a 2012 Moderna news release, Afeyan said the firms promise rivals that of the earliest biotechnology companies over 30 years ago adding an entirely new drug category to the pharmaceutical arsenal.

But although Moderna has made each of the founders hundreds of millions of dollars even before the company had produced a single product Rossis account is marked by bitterness. In interviews with the Globe in October, he accused Langer and Afeyan of propagating a condescending myth that he didnt understand his discoverys full potential until they pointed it out to him.

Its total malarkey, said Rossi, who ended his affiliation with Moderna in 2014. Im embarrassed for them. Everybody in the know actually just shakes their heads.

Rossi said that the slide decks he used in his presentation to Flagship noted that his discovery could lead to new medicines. Thats the thing Noubar has used to turn Flagship into a big company, and he says it was totally his idea, Rossi said.

Afeyan, the chair of Moderna, recently credited Rossi with advancing the work of the Penn scientists. But, he said, that only spurred Afeyan and Langer to ask the question, Could you think of a code molecule that helps you make anything you want within the body?

Langer, for his part, told STAT and the Globe that Rossi made an important finding but had focused almost entirely on the stem cell thing.

Despite the squabbling that followed the birth of Moderna, other scientists also saw messenger RNA as potentially revolutionary.

In Mainz, Germany, situated on the left bank of the Rhine, another new company was being formed by a married team of researchers who would also see the vast potential for the technology, though vaccines for infectious diseases werent on top of their list then.

A native of Turkey, Ugur Sahin moved to Germany after his father got a job at a Ford factory in Cologne. His wife, zlem Treci had, as a child, followed her father, a surgeon, on his rounds at a Catholic hospital. She and Sahin are physicians who met in 1990 working at a hospital in Saarland.

The couple have long been interested in immunotherapy, which harnesses the immune system to fight cancer and has become one of the most exciting innovations in medicine in recent decades. In particular, they were tantalized by the possibility of creating personalized vaccines that teach the immune system to eliminate cancer cells.

Both see themselves as scientists first and foremost. But they are also formidable entrepreneurs. After they co-founded another biotech, the couple persuaded twin brothers who had invested in that firm, Thomas and Andreas Strungmann, to spin out a new company that would develop cancer vaccines that relied on mRNA.

That became BioNTech, another blended name, derived from Biopharmaceutical New Technologies. Its U.S. headquarters is in Cambridge. Sahin is the CEO, Treci the chief medical officer.

We are one of the leaders in messenger RNA, but we dont consider ourselves a messenger RNA company, said Sahin, also a professor at the Mainz University Medical Center. We consider ourselves an immunotherapy company.

Like Moderna, BioNTech licensed technology developed by the Pennsylvania scientist whose work was long ignored, Karik, and her collaborator, Weissman. In fact, in 2013, the company hired Karik as senior vice president to help oversee its mRNA work.

But in their early years, the two biotechs operated in very different ways.

In 2011, Moderna hired the CEO who would personify its brash approach to the business of biotech.

Stphane Bancel was a rising star in the life sciences, a chemical engineer with a Harvard MBA who was known as a businessman, not a scientist. At just 34, he became CEO of the French diagnostics firm BioMrieux in 2007 but was wooed away to Moderna four years later by Afeyan.

Moderna made a splash in 2012 with the announcement that it had raised $40 million from venture capitalists despite being years away from testing its science in humans. Four months later, the British pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca agreed to pay Moderna a staggering $240 million for the rights to dozens of mRNA drugs that did not yet exist.

The biotech had no scientific publications to its name and hadnt shared a shred of data publicly. Yet it somehow convinced investors and multinational drug makers that its scientific findings and expertise were destined to change the world. Under Bancels leadership, Moderna would raise more than $1 billion in investments and partnership funds over the next five years.

Modernas promise and the more than $2 billion it raised before going public in 2018 hinged on creating a fleet of mRNA medicines that could be safely dosed over and over. But behind the scenes the companys scientists were running into a familiar problem. In animal studies, the ideal dose of their leading mRNA therapy was triggering dangerous immune reactions the kind for which Karik had improvised a major workaround under some conditions but a lower dose had proved too weak to show any benefits.

Moderna had to pivot. If repeated doses of mRNA were too toxic to test in human beings, the company would have to rely on something that takes only one or two injections to show an effect. Gradually, biotechs self-proclaimed disruptor became a vaccines company, putting its experimental drugs on the back burner and talking up the potential of a field long considered a loss-leader by the drug industry.

Meanwhile BioNTech has often acted like the anti-Moderna, garnering far less attention.

In part, that was by design, said Sahin. For the first five years, the firm operated in what Sahin called submarine mode, issuing no news releases, and focusing on scientific research, much of it originating in his university lab. Unlike Moderna, the firm has published its research from the start, including about 150 scientific papers in just the past eight years.

In 2013, the firm began disclosing its ambitions to transform the treatment of cancer and soon announced a series of eight partnerships with major drug makers. BioNTech has 13 compounds in clinical trials for a variety of illnesses but, like Moderna, has yet to get a product approved.

When BioNTech went public last October, it raised $150 million, and closed with a market value of $3.4 billion less than half of Modernas when it went public in 2018.

Despite his role as CEO, Sahin has largely maintained the air of an academic. He still uses his university email address and rides a 20-year-old mountain bicycle from his home to the office because he doesnt have a drivers license.

Then, late last year, the world changed.

Shortly before midnight, on Dec. 30, the International Society for Infectious Diseases, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit, posted an alarming report online. A number of people in Wuhan, a city of more than 11 million people in central China, had been diagnosed with unexplained pneumonia.

Chinese researchers soon identified 41 hospitalized patients with the disease. Most had visited the Wuhan South China Seafood Market. Vendors sold live wild animals, from bamboo rats to ostriches, in crowded stalls. That raised concerns that the virus might have leaped from an animal, possibly a bat, to humans.

After isolating the virus from patients, Chinese scientists on Jan. 10 posted online its genetic sequence. Because companies that work with messenger RNA dont need the virus itself to create a vaccine, just a computer that tells scientists what chemicals to put together and in what order, researchers at Moderna, BioNTech, and other companies got to work.

A pandemic loomed. The companies focus on vaccines could not have been more fortuitous.

Moderna and BioNTech each designed a tiny snip of genetic code that could be deployed into cells to stimulate a coronavirus immune response. The two vaccines differ in their chemical structures, how the substances are made, and how they deliver mRNA into cells. Both vaccines require two shots a few weeks apart.

The biotechs were competing against dozens of other groups that employed varying vaccine-making approaches, including the traditional, more time-consuming method of using an inactivated virus to produce an immune response.

Moderna was especially well-positioned for this moment.

Forty-two days after the genetic code was released, Modernas CEO Bancel opened an email on Feb. 24 on his cellphone and smiled, as he recalled to the Globe. Up popped a photograph of a box placed inside a refrigerated truck at the Norwood plant and bound for the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md. The package held a few hundred vials, each containing the experimental vaccine.

Moderna was the first drug maker to deliver a potential vaccine for clinical trials. Soon, its vaccine became the first to undergo testing on humans, in a small early-stage trial. And on July 28, it became the first to start getting tested in a late-stage trial in a scene that reflected the firms receptiveness to press coverage.

The first volunteer to get a shot in Modernas late-stage trial was a television anchor at the CNN affiliate in Savannah, Ga., a move that raised eyebrows at rival vaccine makers.

Along with those achievements, Moderna has repeatedly stirred controversy.

On May 18, Moderna issued a press release trumpeting positive interim clinical data. The firm said its vaccine had generated neutralizing antibodies in the first eight volunteers in the early-phase study, a tiny sample.

But Moderna didnt provide any backup data, making it hard to assess how encouraging the results were. Nonetheless, Modernas share price rose 20% that day.

Some top Moderna executives also drew criticism for selling shares worth millions, including Bancel and the firms chief medical officer, Tal Zaks.

In addition, some critics have said the government has given Moderna a sweetheart deal by bankrolling the costs for developing the vaccine and pledging to buy at least 100 million doses, all for $2.48 billion.

That works out to roughly $25 a dose, which Moderna acknowledges includes a profit.

In contrast, the government has pledged more than $1 billion to Johnson & Johnson to manufacture and provide at least 100 million doses of its vaccine, which uses different technology than mRNA. But J&J, which collaborated with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centers Center for Virology and Vaccine Research and is also in a late-stage trial, has promised not to profit off sales of the vaccine during the pandemic.

Over in Germany, Sahin, the head of BioNTech, said a Lancet article in January about the outbreak in Wuhan, an international hub, galvanized him.

We understood that this would become a pandemic, he said.

The next day, he met with his leadership team.

I told them that we have to deal with a pandemic which is coming to Germany, Sahin recalled.

He also realized he needed a strong partner to manufacture the vaccine and thought of Pfizer. The two companies had worked together before to try to develop mRNA influenza vaccines. In March, he called Pfizers top vaccine expert, Kathrin Jansen.

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The story of mRNA: From a loose idea to a tool that may help curb Covid - STAT

Immune-Onc Therapeutics Announces Orphan Drug Designation of IO-202 (Anti-LILRB4) for Treatment of AML and Poster Presentation at ASH 2020 – BioSpace

Nov. 10, 2020 16:00 UTC

Trials in Progress poster presentation at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting to detail mechanisms of action, preclinical data and trial design

IO-202, targeting the immune inhibitory receptor LILRB4 (also known as ILT3), is being evaluated in a Phase I trial for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML)

PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Immune-Onc Therapeutics, Inc. (Immune-Onc), a clinical-stage cancer immunotherapy company today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Orphan Drug Designation status for its first-in-class antagonist antibody IO-202 for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In addition, the company announced acceptance of its Trials in Progress poster presentation for IO-202 at the 62nd American Society of Hematology (ASH) Annual Meeting and Exposition. The meeting is taking place virtually December 5-8, 2020.

Orphan Drug Designation qualifies the sponsor for various development incentives of the Orphan Drug Act, including exemption of FDA application fees and tax credits for qualified clinical testing, to advance the evaluation and development of products that demonstrate promise for the diagnosis and treatment of rare diseases or conditions that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the United States. Orphan Drug Designation can also convey seven years of marketing exclusivity for a drug approved to treat an orphan disease in the United States.

Receiving orphan drug designation for IO-202 in AML is another important milestone for Immune-Onc and underscores the need for effective new treatments for this aggressive and hard-to-treat cancer, said Charlene Liao, Ph.D., chief executive officer of Immune-Onc. We are pleased with the progress we are making in advancing IO-202. As outlined in our ASH poster presentation, IO-202 holds promise for AML patients because it demonstrates novel mechanisms of action in overcoming immune suppression. IO-202 is one of several programs in our pipeline that target the LILRB family of immune inhibitory receptors. We are excited to continue our momentum in evaluating IO-202 and Immune-Onc's preclinical candidates in other cancers, including solid tumors, in the near future.

ASH Trials in Progress Poster

Based on highly selective criteria, Trials in Progress" abstracts are reviewed for the most innovative science. The abstract (#2867), A First-in-Human (FIH) Phase 1 Study of the Anti-LILRB4 Antibody IO-202 in Relapsed/Refractory (R/R) Myelomonocytic and Monocytic Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and R/R Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia (CMML), was selected for poster presentation in the 2020 ASH Annual Meeting Program. Lead investigator Courtney D. DiNardo, M.D., MSc, associate professor, Department of Leukemia, Division of Cancer Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, will share the poster via a brief PowerPoint presentation with accompanying audio.

The poster (Abstract #2867) will be presented at Session: 616. Acute Myeloid Leukemia: Novel Therapy, excluding Transplantation: Poster III, on Monday, December 7, 2020, 7:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Pacific Time.

In addition to the presentation, the abstract was published online in the November supplemental issue of Blood and in the online meeting program on November 5, 2020.

ABOUT LILRB4 (also known as ILT3)

LILRB4, also known as ILT3, is an immune-modulatory transmembrane protein found on antigen presenting cells (APCs). It inhibits APC activation and induces immune tolerance via T-suppressor cells. It is expressed on certain hematologic cancer cells and immune suppressive myeloid cells in the solid tumor microenvironment. Immune-Onc and The University of Texas published pioneering research in Nature illuminating the role of LILRB4 in immune suppression and tumor infiltration in AML.

ABOUT IO-202

IO-202 is a first-in-class monoclonal antibody that antagonizes LILRB4 with high binding affinity and specificity. It has broad potential in both blood cancers and solid tumors. In hematologic malignancies, preclinical studies showed that IO-202 converts a dont kill me to a kill me signal by activating T cell killing and converts a dont find me to a find me signal by inhibiting infiltration of hematologic cancer cells.

IO-202 is being evaluated in a Phase I trial in two forms of blood cancer, AML and CMML. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted IO-202 Orphan Drug Designation status for treatment of AML in October 2020.

In solid tumors, IO-202 has potential to be combined with anti-PD-(L)1, other immunotherapies, and/or immunogenic chemotherapy. The company plans to evaluate IO-202 in solid tumors and in other forms of blood cancer in the near future.

ABOUT AML and CMML

AML, the most common acute leukemia (blood and bone marrow cancer) in adults, is characterized by the proliferation of abnormal myeloblasts (a type of white blood cell) in the bone marrow. Nearly 20,000 new cases are expected in the U.S. in 2020. Despite advances in treatment, less than 30 percent of acute myeloid leukemia patients are alive five years after initial diagnosis.

CMML is a cancer that starts in blood-forming cells in the bone marrow and invades the blood. The condition is rare, with about 1,100 cases in the U.S. each year.

ABOUT IMMUNE-ONC THERAPEUTICS

Immune-Onc Therapeutics, Inc. (Immune-Onc) is a clinical-stage cancer immunotherapy company dedicated to the discovery and development of novel myeloid checkpoint inhibitors for cancer patients. Headquartered in Palo Alto, California, Immune-Onc has assembled a diverse team with deep expertise in drug development and proven track records of success at leading biotechnology companies.

The company aims to translate unique scientific insights in myeloid cell biology and immune inhibitory receptors to discover and develop first-in-class biotherapeutics that disarm immune suppression in the tumor microenvironment. Immune-Onc has a promising pipeline with a current focus on targeting the Leukocyte Immunoglobulin-Like Receptor subfamily B (LILRB) of myeloid checkpoints. The company has strategic research collaborations with The University of Texas, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and has invested in proprietary models, assays and tools to interrogate the biology and translate this cutting-edge research into the development of novel therapies.

In addition to IO-202, Immune-Oncs pipeline includes IO-108, an antibody targeting LILRB2 (also known as ILT4) in the IND-enabling stage of development. Additional preclinical candidates focused on myeloid checkpoints include an anti-LAIR1 antibody and multiple undisclosed programs for solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. For more information, please visit http://www.immune-onc.com and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20201110005054/en/

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Immune-Onc Therapeutics Announces Orphan Drug Designation of IO-202 (Anti-LILRB4) for Treatment of AML and Poster Presentation at ASH 2020 - BioSpace

ERC Synergy project explores causes of drug tolerance in intractable fungal infections – News-Medical.net

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Nov 10 2020

Over the next six years, research groups at Charit - Universittsmedizin Berlin and Tel Aviv University will study how invasive fungal pathogens are able to evade treatments and develop tolerance to antifungal drugs. In addition to generating fundamental knowledge of fungal pathogens, this large project aims to provide new insights into fungal cell metabolism. This joint endeavor is supported by a European Research Council ERC Synergy Grant worth approximately 9.7 million.

While fungal infections are extremely common, they are not usually life-threatening. Invasive fungal infections, however, are an exception, as they can lead to sepsis, a severe condition caused by an extreme systemic response to uncontrolled infection. Fungal infections of this kind can have a mortality of up to 50 percent, are often difficult to treat, and are responsible for at least 1.6 million deaths per year.

While bacterial infections can be treated with a range of antimicrobial drugs, only three classes of drugs (azoles, echinocandins and polyenes) have been shown to be effective against invasive fungal infections. Reasons for the paucity of effective drugs include the fact that fungal and human (and other mammalian) cells are very similar, which leaves very few pathogen-specific drug targets to choose from.

In addition to the dearth of antifungals, the situation is further exacerbated by the declining efficacy of these drugs. For instance, the drug of choice in the treatment of invasive candidiasis, fluconazole, is ineffective in approximately half of all invasive infections caused by Candida albicans, the most common human pathogen (better known as the organism responsible for thrush). Treatment failures such as these are, in part, explained by pathogen tolerance, a phenomenon which allows fungal cells to continue growing in the presence of an antifungal drug.

Under the leadership of Prof. Dr. Markus Ralser (Director of Charit's Institute of Biochemistry and Group Leader of the 'Biochemistry and Metabolic Systems Biology' research group) and Prof. Dr. Judith Berman (head of the Judith Berman Lab at Shmunis School of Biomedical and Cancer Research, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University) a leading expert in fungal pathogens, the research teams are hoping to identify the precise mechanisms responsible for these treatment failures. One of their key hypotheses is that the explanation may be found in metabolic processes.

Our previous observations revealed that different types of cells work together. This collaboration involves the exchange of metabolites such as nutrients and results in the cells jointly developing tolerance. This metabolic collaboration makes cells heterogeneous. We have evidence that this metabolic heterogeneity may be a key factor in drug tolerance. Furthermore, inhibitors of metabolic pathways appear to influence the stress survival mechanisms in some of these cells."

Prof. Dr. Markus Ralser, Director of Charit's Institute of Biochemistry and Group Leader of the 'Biochemistry and Metabolic Systems Biology' research group

Both the Berlin and Tel Aviv research teams will now study the underlying biological mechanisms in great detail. "The situation regarding invasive fungal pathogens is fundamentally different from that involving antibiotic-resistant bacteria," explains Prof. Berman. She adds: "In problematic bacterial infections, pathogens often acquire mutations which render them resistant to antibiotics. In fungal pathogens, however, resistance is far less common and spreads less rapidly. Rather, what we find is that fungal cells become heterogeneous and adapt to their immediate environment. A proportion of cells continue to grow slowly, even in the presence of an antifungal drug. An examination of these growing cells shows that the growth exhibited by both drug-tolerant and non-tolerant cells is similar to that of the original strains. Cellular tolerance is therefore a phenotypic trait; it is not caused by mutations akin to those seen in bacterial resistance."

Their highly interactive work program will see Prof. Berman and Prof. Ralser work together to test thousands of fungal strains, establishing their drug tolerance levels and comparing their metabolic characteristics. To do so, they will work with clinicians and biologists from across Europe, Canada and the United States. Their common aim is to identify the molecular pathways which explain drug tolerance in fungal pathogens. The researchers also hope to develop new concepts and drugs which will be effective in preventing fungal pathogens from developing increased tolerance to antifungal drugs. The researchers are hopeful that their work will contribute to the development of new antifungal agents and new combination antifungal therapies which will be effective against life-threatening invasive fungal infections.

Prof. Markus Ralser studied genetics and molecular biology at the University of Salzburg and completed a PhD in neurodegenerative disorders at the Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Molecular Genetics in Berlin. Following his training in mass spectrometry at VU Amsterdam (Netherlands), he set up a Junior Research Group at the MPI for Molecular Genetics in Berlin, which he eventually moved to the University of Cambridge (United Kingdom) in 2011. He has been a Group Leader at the Francis Crick Institute in London since 2013. Markus Ralser became Einstein Professor of Biochemistry in 2018 and is one of the two Directors of Charit's Department of Biochemistry. His work focuses on central carbon metabolism (including the evolutionary origins of central carbon metabolism), amino acid metabolism, the metabolic responses to oxidative stress, and the use of self-establishing communities to study the exchange of metabolites in yeast. Prof. Ralser's numerous awards include the EMBO Gold Medal, the BioMed Central Research Award, the Starling Medal and the Colworth Medal.

Prof. Judith Berman completed her PhD at the Faculty of Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel). After starting her lab as Associate Professor at the University of Minnesota, her steep career path quickly led to her becoming a Distinguished McKnight University Professor at the Department of Genetics & Cellular Biology. In 2012, she became a Full Professor at the Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Tel Aviv University (Israel). Prof. Berman is a world-leading expert in fungal pathogen tolerance and holds numerous awards and honors. She is a researcher at the Shmunis School of Biomedical and Cancer Research at Tel Aviv University, and in addition to being a Member of the EMBO and the Genetics Society of America, she is also a Fellow of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science and a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology (ASM).

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ERC Synergy project explores causes of drug tolerance in intractable fungal infections - News-Medical.net

The Growth Factors Market To Show Constructive Disruption With ~ US$ 2.5 Bn – TechnoWeekly

Market Report Summary

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According to the latest market report published by PMR on thegrowth factors marketduring2014 2018and forecast for2019 2029,the global growth factors market is projected to reach~ US$ 2.5 Bn by the end of 2029.The growth factors market is expected to grow with a CAGR of~ 8 %during the forecast period2019-2029.

Growth factors are gaining high demand for cell culture-based research in the field of oncology, wound management, cardiovascular, and other medical fields. The growth factors market is expected to grow at a significant rate due to the growing demand for stem cell biology research.

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Increasing Life Science Research Funding Favors the Growth of the Market

Growth factors & cytokines play an important role in life science-based research. Various government, private, and commercial organizations are providing funding for life science-based research for the development of new products to reduce illness and economic burden. Investments in R&D are likely to increase in countries such as China, India, and South Korea.

Moreover, the increasing demand for growth factors in tissue regeneration and regenerative medicines is also expected to propel the growth of the global growth factors market. The global growth factors market is expected to witness significant growth over the forecast period due to increasing oncological and stem cell biology research funding, and the development of new products for wound management.

However, the high cost of some growth factors and lack of skilled professionals are among the major factors hindering the growth of the growth factors market.

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Interleukins to Gain Significant Market Value Shares in the Global Growth Factors Market

Based on product type, the global growth factors market has been segmented into Interleukin (ILs), Epidermal Growth Factors (EGFs), Transforming Growth Beta Factor (TGF-beta), Fibroblast Growth Factors (FGFs), Insulin-Like Growth Factors (IGFs), Platelet-Derived Growth Factors (PDGFs), Hepatocyte Growth Factors (HGFs), Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors (VEGFs), Tumor Necrosis Factors (TNFs), and others.

In terms of revenue, the Interleukins (ILs) are expected to hold a prominent share in the growth factors market revenues, through the end of forecast period.

Based on application, the global growth factors market has been segmented into oncology, dermatology, cardiovascular disease & diabetes, hematology, wound healing, cell culture, and others. Cell culture will remain the most prominent application area of growth factors, as indicated by PMRs study. By end user, the global growth factors market continues to witness a strong boost through the growing demand from contract research organizations, pharmaceutical & biotechnology companies, and research centers & academic institutes.

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North America Holds a Prominent Revenue Share in the Global Growth Factors Market

Geographically, the global growth factors market has been segmented into East Asia, South Asia, Oceania, North America, Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East & Africa. North America holds a prominent revenue share in the global growth factors market as of 2018.

The East Asia growth factors market is expected to grow with a significant growth rate over the forecast period. Countries such as the U.S., China, Germany, Japan, the UK, France, and India accounted for a significant revenue share in the global growth factors market in 2018.

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The Growth Factors Market To Show Constructive Disruption With ~ US$ 2.5 Bn - TechnoWeekly

Mimicking the early development of the heart – Tech Explorist

Once upon a time, growing organs in the lab were science fiction. But now, methods such as stem cell biology and tissue engineering have turned that fiction into reality with the advent of organoids.

Organoids are tiny lab-grown tissues and organs that are anatomically correct and physiologically functional.

Recently, the lab of Matthias Ltolf at the School of Life Sciences at EPFL has successfully produced a mouse heart organoid in its early embryonic stages. Scientists grew organoids from mouse embryonic stem cells, which, under the right conditions, can self-organize into structures that mimic aspects of the architecture, cellular composition, and function of tissues found in real organs.

Placed in cell-culture under specific conditions, the embryonic stem cells from a three-dimensional aggregate called a gastruloid, which can follow the mouse embryos developmental phases.

This studys idea was that the mouse gastruloid could be utilized to mimic the beginning phases of heart development in the embryo. This is a new use of organoids, which are commonly developed to mimic adult tissues and organs.

Also, there are three features of mouse gastruloids that make them a suitable template for mimicking embryonic development: they establish a body plan like real embryos. They show similar gene expression patterns. And when it comes to the heart, which is the first organ to form and function in the embryo, the mouse gastruloid also preserves important tissue-tissue interactions necessary to grow one.

Equipped with this, the scientists exposed mouse embryonic stem cells to a cocktail of three factors known to promote heart growth. Following 168 hours, the subsequent gastruloids gave early heart development indications: they expressed several genes that regulate cardiovascular development in the embryo. They even generated what resembled a vascular network.

Importantly, scientists found that the gastruloids developed what they call an anterior cardiac crescent-like domain. This structure produced a beating heart tissue, similar to the embryonic heart. As the muscle cells of the embryonic heart, the beating compartment was also sensitive to calcium ions.

Giuliana Rossi, a post-doctoral researcher from Ltolfs laboratory, said,Opening up an entirely new dimension to organoids, the breakthrough work shows they can also be used to mimic embryonic stages of development. One of the advantages of embryonic organoids is that, through the co-development of multiple tissues, they preserve crucial interactions that are necessary for embryonic organogenesis.

The emerging cardiac cells are thus exposed to a context similar to the one that they encounter in the embryo.

The study was conducted in collaboration with Viventis Microscopy, EPFL Bioimaging and Optics Platform, Institut de Biologie du Dveloppement de Marseille, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, EPFL Institute of Chemical Sciences and Engineering.

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Mimicking the early development of the heart - Tech Explorist

90% efficacy for Pfizers COVID-19 mRNA vaccine is striking. But we need to wait for the full data – Australian Times

Harry Al-Wassiti, Monash University; Colin Pouton, Monash University, and Kylie Quinn, RMIT University

German biotech company BioNTech and US pharmaceutical Pfizer announced on Monday promising early results from their phase 3 clinical trial for a vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

These early results are what is known as an interim analysis. Its an early look at the data before a study is complete, to understand if there is any indication of whether the vaccine might work.

Currently, this trial has enrolled 43,538 volunteers, giving half the volunteers two doses of the vaccine and the other half two doses of a placebo. These volunteers then continued their normal lives, but they were monitored for any symptoms that could be COVID-19, with testing to confirm.

Analysis of 94 volunteers with confirmed COVID-19 suggests the vaccine has an efficacy of over 90%.

This means that if you took ten people who were going to get sick from COVID-19 and vaccinated them, only one out of ten would now get sick.

There is more data to come. This is a press release and the data have not undergone peer-review through scientific publication, although it has been assessed by an independent monitoring board. The study also wont be complete until 164 volunteers have confirmed COVID-19, and the estimate of efficacy may therefore change. Finally, the volunteers must be monitored for a defined period of time after vaccination for any side effects and this must be completed.

Important questions also remain. Its unclear how long protection will last, as this study has only been underway for three months. Its unclear if this vaccine protects against severe disease or if this vaccine will work equally well in everyone. For example, a phase 1 clinical trial with this vaccine showed that immune responses were lower in older people.

But 90% efficacy is striking. To give some context, the US Food and Drug Administration indicated they would licence a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine with 50% efficacy. The flu vaccine often provides around 60% efficacy and the mumps vaccine, which is currently the fastest vaccine ever made at four years, provides around 88% efficacy.

The BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine could outstrip that, after just nine months of development. This level of efficacy means virus transmission could be very effectively controlled.

That has the research community excited. It bodes well for other vaccines currently being tested for SARS-CoV-2 and we could end up with multiple successful vaccines. This would be great because some might work better in certain populations, like older people.

Multiple vaccines could also be manufactured using a broad range of established infrastructure, which would accelerate vaccine distribution.

The BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine is whats called an mRNA vaccine.

As this article by Associate Professor Archa Fox, an expert on molecular cell biology from the University of Western Australia, explains:

mRNA vaccines are coated molecules of mRNA, similar to DNA, that carry the instructions for making a viral protein.

After injection into muscle, the mRNA is taken up by cells. Ribosomes, the cells protein factories, read the mRNA instructions and make the viral protein. These new proteins are exported from cells and the rest of the immunisation process is identical to other vaccines: our immune system mounts a response by recognising the proteins as foreign and developing antibodies against them.

The problem is Australia cant make mRNA vaccines onshore yet.

The Australian government has an agreement for ten million doses of the BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine. Since this vaccine requires two doses, this agreement is sufficient for five million Australians. Its unclear how long it will take until any vaccine is widely available, but we may hear more about this in the coming weeks and months.

The vaccine requires storage at a temperature below -60. This will certainly be a challenge for shipping to Australia and local distribution, although not impossible. One solution to this problem is to form vaccination centres to roll out the vaccine once it becomes available. In a briefing by Pfizer, the company said it will use ultra-low temperature shipment strategies and the vaccine can then be distributed on dry-ice.

Currently, Australia has no capacity to produce mRNA on a commercial scale given the technologys novelty. But we (the authors) and others have been working to coordinate and build the manufacturing capacity in Australia for future mRNA vaccine and therapeutics. With financial support aimed at private-public mRNA manufacturing collaboration, Australia can equip itself with this vital technological asset.

Harry Al-Wassiti, Bioengineer and Research Fellow, Monash University; Colin Pouton, Professor of Pharmaceutical Biology, Monash University, and Kylie Quinn, Vice-Chancellors Research Fellow, School of Health and Biomedical Sciences, RMIT University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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90% efficacy for Pfizers COVID-19 mRNA vaccine is striking. But we need to wait for the full data - Australian Times