4.6 Article

Production of a high purity, C-tagged hepatitis B surface antigen fusion protein VLP vaccine for malaria expressed in Pichia pastoris under cGMP conditions

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 119, Issue 10, Pages 2784-2793

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.28181

Keywords

cGMP; malaria; vaccine

Funding

  1. European Union Seventh Framework Programme

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This study presents a method for producing a VLP-based anti-malaria vaccine called R21 under cGMP regulations. The production process was modified to produce clinical-grade material for human clinical trials. The use of C-tag technology for purification of the vaccine candidate is a first in human clinical trials. The R21 vaccine has shown high efficacy in African clinical trials.
Virus-like particles (VLPs) induce strong humoral and cellular responses and have formed the basis of some currently licensed vaccines. Here, we present the method used for the production of R21, a VLP-based anti-sporozoite malaria vaccine, under current Clinical Good Manufacturing Practice regulations (cGMP). Previous preclinical studies in BALB/c mice showed that R21 produced almost complete protection against sporozoite challenge with transgenic Plasmodium berghei parasites. Here, we have modified the preclinical production process to enable the production of sufficient quantities of highly pure, clinical-grade material for use in human clinical trials. The R21 construct was re-engineered to include a C-tag to allow affinity-based separation from the major contaminant alcohol oxidase 1 (AOX 1, similar to 74 kDa). To our knowledge, this is the first use of C-tag technology to purify a VLP vaccine candidate for use in human clinical trials. The R21 vaccine has shown high-level efficacy in an African Phase Ilb trial, and multiple clinical trials are underway to assess the safety and efficacy of the vaccine. Our findings support the future use of C-tag platform technologies to enable cGMP-compliant biomanufacturing of high purity yeast-expressed VLP-based vaccines for early phase clinical trials when clinical grade material is required in smaller quantities in a quick time frame.

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