UVA Health scientists have developed a that could be faster, cheaper and easier to distribute than current options.
The University of Virginia School of Medicine’s Dr. Steven L. Zeichner leads the team that is refining a vaccine-development platform to rapidly produce vaccines during outbreaks such as COVID-19.
The approach could be faster to develop than mRNA vaccines and avoid some of their biggest challenges, including the need for constant cold storage.
Dr. Steven L. Zeichner, a UVA School of Medicine researcher, leads a team working on a procedure that dramatically shortens the time needed to develop vaccines for new threats. (Contributed photo)
“We hope that vaccines made using this new platform will be very easy and inexpensive to manufacture in existing factories around the world using very abundant and easy-to-obtain starting materials, and be stable at ordinary refrigerator temperatures, so they are easy to distribute,†said Zeichner, part of Âé¶¹ÆÆ½â°æ departments of Pediatrics and of Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology.
“We hope that the vaccines made using this platform will help prevent disease not only in people, but also in animals, so that they can help farmers and consumers, and prevent diseases from spreading from animals to humans,†he said.
From design to delivery
The process starts by identifying a key piece of a virus or bacterium that the immune system can learn to recognize and attack. Scientists then design a vaccine around that target and fine-tune it to trigger a strong, effective immune response.
Computer modeling tools are used to confirm the vaccine design will work as intended. Once verified, the instructions for making the vaccine are sent to a company that produces synthetic DNA.
That DNA is placed into specially selected bacteria, which act as tiny vaccine factories. The bacteria are grown, then safely inactivated to create the final vaccine.
This method is easier than the processes used to make mRNA and many other modern vaccines, building on long-established techniques that have been used for more than a century to produce vaccines for both people and animals.