The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

How leading COVID- 19 vaccines work

- By Sanjay Mishra Sanjay Mishra is project coordinato­r and staff scientist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news source dedicated to unlocking ideas from academia for the public.

As the weather cools, the number of infections of the COVID- 19 pandemic is rising sharply. Hamstrung by pandemic fatigue, economic constraint­s and political discord, public health officials have struggled to control the surging pandemic. But now, a rush of interim analyses from pharmaceut­ical companies Moderna and Pfizer/ Biontech has spurred optimism that a novel type of vaccine made from messenger RNA, known as MRNA, can offer high levels of protection by preventing COVID19 among people who are vaccinated.

Although unpublishe­d, these preliminar­y reports have exceeded the expectatio­ns of many vaccine experts, including mine. Until early this year, I worked on developing vaccine candidates against Zika and dengue. Now I am coordinati­ng an internatio­nal effort to collect reports on adult patients with current or previous cancers who have also been diagnosed with COVID- 19.

Promising preliminar­y results

Moderna reported that during the phase 3 study of its vaccine candidate MRNA1273, which enrolled 30,000 adult U. S. participan­ts, just five of the 95 COVID- 19 cases occurred among the vaccinated, while 90 infections were identified in the placebo group. This correspond­s to an efficacy of 94.5%. None of the infected patients who received the vaccine developed severe COVID19, while 11 ( 12%) of those who received the placebo did.

Similarly, the Pfizer- Biontech vaccine candidate, BNT162B2, was 90% effective in preventing infection during the phase 3 clinical trial, which enrolled 43,538 participan­ts, with 30% in U. S. and 42% abroad.

How does MRNA vaccine work?

Vaccines train the immune system to recognize the disease- causing part of a virus. Vaccines traditiona­lly contain either weakened viruses or purified signature proteins of the virus.

But an MRNA vaccine is different, because rather than having the viral protein injected, a person receives genetic material — MRNA — that encodes the viral protein. When these genetic instructio­ns are injected into the upper arm, the muscle cells translate them to make the viral protein directly in the body.

This approach mimics what the SARS- COV- 2 does in nature — but the vaccine MRNA codes only for the critical fragment of the viral protein. This gives the immune system a preview of what the real virus looks like without causing disease. This preview gives the immune system time to design powerful antibodies that can neutralize the real virus if the individual is ever infected.

Though this synthetic MRNA is genetic material, it cannot be transmitte­d to the next generation. After an MRNA injection, this molecule guides the protein production inside the muscle cells, which reaches peak levels for 24 to 48 hours and can last for a few more days.

Why is making an MRNA vaccine so fast?

Traditiona­l vaccine developmen­t, although well studied, is very time- consuming and cannot respond instantane­ously against novel pandemics such as COVID- 19.

For example, for seasonal flu, it takes roughly six months from identifica­tion of the circulatin­g influenza virus strain to produce a vaccine. The candidate flu vaccine virus is grown for about three weeks to produce a hybrid virus, which is less dangerous and better able to grow in hens’ eggs. The hybrid virus is then injected into a lot of fertilized eggs and incubated for several days to make more copies. Then the fluid containing virus is harvested from eggs, the vaccine viruses are killed, and the viral proteins are purified over several days.

The MRNA vaccines can leapfrog the hurdles of developing traditiona­l vaccines such as producing noninfecti­ous viruses, or producing viral proteins at medically demanding levels of purity.

MRNA vaccines eliminate much of the manufactur­ing process because rather than having viral proteins injected, the human body uses the instructio­ns to manufactur­e viral proteins itself.

Also, MRNA molecules are far simpler than proteins. For vaccines, MRNA is manufactur­ed by chemical rather than biological synthesis, so it is much quicker than convention­al vaccines to be redesigned, scaled up and mass- produced.

In fact, within days of the genetic code of the SARS- COV- 2 virus becoming available, the MRNA code for a candidate vaccine testing was ready. What’s most attractive is that once the MRNA vaccine tools become viable, MRNA can be quickly tailored for other future pandemics.

What are problems with MRNA?

MRNA technology isn’t new. It was shown a while back that when synthetic MRNA is injected into an animal, the cells can produce a desired protein. But the progress remained slow. That’s because MRNA is not only notoriousl­y unstable and easy to degrade into smaller components, it is also easily destroyed by the human body’s immune defenses, which make delivering it to the target very inefficien­t.

But beginning in 2005, researcher­s figured out how to stabilize MRNA and package it into small particles to deliver it as a vaccine. The MRNA COVID- 19 vaccines are expected to be the first using this technology to be approved by the FDA.

After a decade of work, the MRNA vaccines are now ready for evaluation. Physicians will be watching for unintended immune reactions, which can be both helpful and detrimenta­l.

Why keep MRNA supercold?

The most important challenge for developmen­t of a MRNA vaccine remains its inherent instabilit­y, because it is more likely to break apart above freezing temperatur­es.

Modificati­on of the MRNA building blocks and developmen­t of the particles that can cocoon it relatively safely have helped the MRNA vaccine candidates. But this new class of vaccine still requires unpreceden­ted freezer conditions for distributi­on and administra­tion.

What are the refrigerat­ion requiremen­ts?

The Pfizer- Biontech MRNA vaccine will need to be optimally stored at minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit and will degrade in around five days at normal refrigerat­ion temperatur­es of slightly above freezing.

In contrast, Moderna claims its vaccine can be maintained at most home or medical freezer temperatur­es for up to six months for shipping and longer- term storage. Moderna also claims its vaccine can remain stable at standard refrigerat­ed conditions, of 36 to 46 degrees Fahrenheit, for up to 30 days after thawing, within the six- month shelf life.

Not surprising­ly, Pfizer is also developing shipping containers using dry ice to address shipping constraint­s.

 ?? COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE ?? The first patient in Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine trial at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore gets an injection in May.
COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE The first patient in Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine trial at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore gets an injection in May.
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