'Active' vaccine adjuvant boosts COVID-19 and flu antibodies in mice

2024-07-09
'Active' vaccine adjuvant boosts COVID-19 and flu antibodies in mice
Preview
来源: FierceBiotech
Boston Children’s Hospital and the researchers have already patented the adjuvant and plan to use funds from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious DiseasesInfectious Diseases to study whether the adjuvant works across age groups.
Compounds called adjuvants are key to making vaccines created from inactive viruses strong enough to generate an immune response. Now, researchers think they may have found one of the most potent adjuvants yet: an immunomodulating small molecule called PVP-037.
“In principle, this compound can be added to any vaccine to enhance its action,” Ofer Levy, M.D., Ph.D., a Boston Children’s Hospital scientist and the lead author on a July 3 Science Advances article describing the discovery, said in an accompanying press release. “PVP-037 is one of the most active adjuvants we’ve discovered, and we think it induces a greater, more durable, and broader immune response to vaccines.”
The researchers identified PVP-037 by screening a 200,000-plus library of small molecules found in human immune cells. Of the 25 hits the analysis returned, PVP-037 was the most active.
The compound is what’s known as an imidazopyrimidine, a versatile molecule often used in drug development across a wide range of diseases. Cell studies on donor immune cells showed that PVP-037 activated immune pathways and cytokine production. In mice, an optimized form of the adjuvant boosted antibodies against flu and SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, when given alongside disease-causing antigens.
Of course, efficacy alone isn’t enough—for an adjuvant to be useful, it needs to be easily integrated into the vaccine development timeline. Here, too, PVP-037 seems to be a good fit. The compound is stable and can be formulated in most drug delivery systems, like oil-in-water emulsions. It’s also easy to work with, according to the researchers.
The study is limited by the fact that the experiments were in mice and that the mechanisms by which the adjuvant works weren’t totally clear. Further, the researchers still need to study how it performs in the presence of actual pathogens, not just key proteins, they wrote in their paper. There are other details to work out as well.
“Immunization studies were undertaken at relatively short time points, such that future studies are needed to assess the impact of PVP-037 on durability of immune responses,” they wrote in the article. “Although we focused on [antibody] responses as important correlates of protection against influenza and SARS-CoV-2 … further studies should assess T cell responses … along with toxicity studies on stable formulations.”
Meanwhile, Boston Children’s and the researchers have already patented the adjuvant and plan to use funds from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious DiseasesAllergy and Infectious Diseases to study whether the adjuvant works across age groups. They’ll be looking at its performance inside influenza, whooping cough and opioid vaccines to prevent fentanyl overdose deaths, according to the press release.
The work on imidazopyrimidines as immunomodulatory compounds has been patented, too, and will eventually be studied for applications in allergy and cancer treatments.
更多内容,请访问原始网站
文中所述内容并不反映新药情报库及其所属公司任何意见及观点,如有版权侵扰或错误之处,请及时联系我们,我们会在24小时内配合处理。
机构
适应症
[+3]
靶点
-
药物
来和芽仔聊天吧
立即开始免费试用!
智慧芽新药情报库是智慧芽专为生命科学人士构建的基于AI的创新药情报平台,助您全方位提升您的研发与决策效率。
立即开始数据试用!
智慧芽新药库数据也通过智慧芽数据服务平台,以API或者数据包形式对外开放,助您更加充分利用智慧芽新药情报信息。