Flu, cancer, HIV: after Covid success, what next for mRNA vaccines?
It is one of the most remarkable
success stories of the pandemic: the unproven technology that delivered the
Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines in record time, helping to turn the tide
on Covid-19. The vaccines are based on mRNA, the molecule that instructs our
cells to make specific proteins. By injecting synthetic mRNA, our cells are
turned into on-demand vaccine factories, pumping out any protein we want our
immune system to learn to recognise and destroy.
Pre-pandemic, the technology was
viewed with scepticism – a clever concept, but not guaranteed to deliver. Now
there is growing confidence that mRNA vaccines could have far-reaching
applications in tackling diseases from flu to malaria.
Flu
Every February flu scientists take
part in an annual ritual: bets are placed at a World Health Organization
meeting on which flu strains will dominate the following winter. There are four
influenza viruses in circulation, each rapidly evolving so that the previous
year’s vaccines will have lost efficacy. Manufacturers need at least six months
to produce vaccines, a laborious process that involves growing attenuated virus
inside millions of chicken eggs. When the flu forecast is on target, vaccines
can be 60% effective, but a mismatch between vaccines and circulating strains
can result in efficacy as low as 10%.
The holy grail of flu research is a
universal vaccine that would work across all four strains and continue to work
for their future incarnations as they shuffle their genomes over time. Such a
vaccine would need to target the core influenza protein that doesn’t change
much from strain to strain. But our immune systems do not respond strongly to
this part of the virus and so the goal has remained elusive for decades.
However, mRNA is so quick and easy to produce that vaccines can be designed to
strike many sites simultaneously. “Such a vaccine will likely be able to induce
broadly protective responses,” said Norbert Pardi, a microbiologist at the
University of Pennsylvania. His team is working on a vaccine candidate that
will use about a dozen pieces of mRNA and is designed to work across several
flu strains. The team hopes to begin human trials in 2023.
Cancer
The HPV vaccine, which protects
against the virus that causes most cervical cancers, already averts thousands
of cases of cancer each year. In future, scientists hope that mRNA vaccines
could be used to vaccinate against cancer itself by teaching the immune system
to recognise mutations before they occur, in an entirely new approach to
treatment. “We’re taking advantage of the known genetic progression of cancer,”
said Prof Herbert Kim Lyerly, who is working on cancer vaccine technology at
Duke University.
His team plans to trial an mRNA
vaccine next year in patients with late-stage breast cancer, where tumours
typically evolve to be unresponsive to drugs by acquiring mutations in specific
genes. Again, an advantage of mRNA is the ability to hit multiple targets at
once – in this case, a handful of potential mutations. “There’s no better
surgeon in the world than your immune system to pick off those [mutated cells]
in the early stage,” said Lyerly.
The first applications, if
successful, could extend a patient’s life by months by keeping cancer at bay
for longer. Eventually it may be possible to prevent cancer in certain
high-risk populations such as heavy smokers, where a mutation in a gene called
KRAS accounts for up to a quarter of cancers.
Malaria
In October the WHO approved the
first rollout of a malaria vaccine. But there is scope for improvement, with
the RTS,S vaccine reducing severe malaria by 30%. A fundamental challenge is
that the malaria parasite has evolved a way of preventing immunologic memory.
Even after catching malaria, let alone being vaccinated, people remain
susceptible to reinfection, and the disease kills 500,000 people annually,
mostly babies and children.
In 2012, Prof Richard Bucala, of
Yale School of Medicine, and colleagues discovered that malaria induced this
“immune system amnesia” using a protein called PMIF, which kills memory T-cells.
Bucala is working on a form of RNA vaccine that would immunise against PMIF.
Studies in mice suggest that
blocking the protein allows the immune system to clear malaria quicker,
resulting in milder illness and, crucially, future immunity. Bucala has teamed
up with scientists at Oxford’s Jenner Vaccine Institute to test the candidate,
and if results are positive they hope to begin human trials next year.
“Vaccines
are desperately needed in the developing world for parasitic diseases that have
long depressed economic and societal development of many countries,” said
Bucala. “RNA has not only enabled the success of our PMIF vaccine but the
platform is far less expensive than protein-based vaccines, opening
opportunities for a malaria vaccine that have not previously existed.”
HIV
“We’re going
into the fifth decade now of a global pandemic for HIV,” said Derek Cain, of
Duke University’s Human Vaccine Institute. So far, a vaccine has remained out
of reach.
Cain’s team has focused on a subset
of HIV patients (fewer than one-third) who eventually develop specialised
antibodies that can neutralise HIV years after infection. By this time there is
a huge reservoir of virus in the body, and it is too late to clear the
infection. “It’s like you find a fire extinguisher but the whole house is on
fire already,” said Cain. However, if a vaccine could induce these antibodies,
the hope is that they could extinguish HIV before it takes hold.
Cain and colleagues have
meticulously mapped out the circuitous route taken by the immune system to
create these highly specialised antibodies, and as part of a consortium they
are concocting a sequence of four or five multi-target mRNA vaccines designed
to “recreate the arms race between the immune system and the pathogen”.
“We
certainly think that an HIV vaccine will be far and away the most complicated
vaccine that we’ve ever had to put into the population,” said Cain. “We don’t
expect it to work 100% or 90% like the Covid vaccines, but even if we can get
to 50-60% that would be a success; 70% would be amazing.”
출처: The Guardian