http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/312/5772/380
Science 21 April 2006:
Vol. 312. no. 5772, pp. 380 - 382
DOI: 10.1126/science.312.5772.380
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News A One-Size-Fits-All Flu Vaccine?Jocelyn Kaiser
The threat of avian influenza has revived efforts to develop "universal" flu
vaccines that protect against all human influenza strains. Although that goal
remains elusive, vaccines that protect against seasonal flu variants could be
closerModern medicine's main weapon against the influenza virus is woefully
unsophisticated. Each year, companies have to make a new batch of flu vaccine
because unlike, say, polio or chickenpox, flu strains change every year. The
vaccine is grown in eggs, a process that takes up to 9 months, and people have
to be vaccinated annually, which many don't bother to do. More troubling, if a
pandemic strain of influenza came along, the virus could kill millions of people
in the time it would take to prepare a matching vaccine. What scientists dream
of is a vaccine that can protect against any flu strain for years or even a
lifetime. This so-called universal flu vaccine is still a long way off, if it's
even possible. But many labs are dusting off
past projects on broad flu vaccines, spurred by new funding and fears that H5N1,
the deadly avian influenza that has swept across half the world, could acquire
the ability to be transmitted from human to human. Until now, "flu has never
been before high enough on the radar screen" for companies in particular to
follow through with a strong push for a universal vaccine, says Gary Nabel,
director of the Vaccine Research Center at the U.S. National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) in Bethesda, Maryland.
Doing so, however, means coming up with an alternative way to stimulate
immunity to the virus. The tried-and-true technique for seasonal flu uses a
killed virus vaccine that works mainly by triggering antibodies to hemagglutinin
(HA), the glycoprotein on the virus's surface that it uses to bind to human
cells. Hemagglutinin and neuraminidase (NA), another surface glycoprotein that
helps newly made viruses exit cells, give strains their names (H5N1, for
example). The sequences of HA and NA mutate easily, which is why each season's
flu strain--although it may be the same in subtype, such as H3N2--"drifts"
slightly from the previous year's, and the annual vaccine must be tailor-made.
To make a universal vaccine for influenza A, which includes the main seasonal
flu strains and bird flu, as well as past pandemic strains, some scientists are
hoping to use "conserved" flu proteins that don't mutate much year to year.
(Influenza B, the other type, occurs only in humans and causes milder symptoms.)
Some of the conserved protein vaccines in the works stimulate production of
antibodies as do conventional flu vaccines, whereas others rouse certain immune
system cells to battle the virus.
Weak spots. A universal flu vaccine would target "conserved"
proteins, such as M2 or NP, an inner protein. CREDIT: C. BICKEL/SCIENCE
Other scientists are pursuing a slightly less ambitious goal: They are working
on vaccines that match a particular HA, such as the H5 in H5N1, but that also
protect against "drift" strains that typically emerge from year to year. It's
not yet clear whether any of these broad vaccines will ever work as well as a
traditional, HA-matched vaccine. But they could help when the annual vaccine
doesn't match the circulating strain exactly, and in a pandemic, they could
reduce deaths until a matched vaccine is ready. "Anything that would dampen a
pandemic would be useful," says virologist Robert Couch of Baylor College of
Medicine in Houston, Texas. One for all
One of the most hotly pursued strategies for a universal vaccine against
influenza A is based on a flu protein called M2. This protein forms an ion
channel crossing the membrane of a virus particle or infected cell, barely
jutting out from the surface. It's an appealing target because the 23 amino
acids that make up the ectodomain, or protruding part, of M2 (known as M2e)
scarcely vary from one human flu strain to the next, even back to the 1918
Spanish flu.
Scientists first showed in the late 1980s that antibodies to M2 can slow flu
infection in mice. In 1999, biochemist Walter Fiers's team at Ghent University
in Belgium reported in Nature Medicine that it had reduced flu deaths in mice
with a vaccine made of M2e fused to another protein, the core of the hepatitis B
virus (HepB). (These proteins clumped into viruslike particles bristling with
M2e that stimulated more antibodies to M2e than did the protein by itself.) In
its latest paper in Vaccine in January, Fiers's lab, now collaborating with the
vaccine company Acambis in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has improved the candidate
vaccine by attaching three copies of M2e to the HepB core, delivering it
nasally--which boosts immune responses compared to injection--and adding an
adjuvant, an ingredient that also increases the body's immune response.
Although M2e is typically conserved, there's a small chance that the protein
could still evolve, enabling the virus to evade a vaccine. To assess that risk,
Walter Gerhard's group at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
pushed the virus to mutate by exposing mice with weak immune systems to an H1N1
seasonal flu strain while giving them antibodies specific to M2e. As they
reported last June in the Journal of Virology, M2e mutants appeared in some mice
after 3 weeks, but there were only two types--fewer than might have been
expected. "To us, that was reassuring," Gerhard says, because it should be
possible to make an M2e vaccine to match the few anticipated variants.
Another major caveat is that although M2 vaccines may prevent deaths from flu,
they may not keep people from getting sick, the way conventional vaccines
normally do, notes Couch. That's because M2 antibodies seem to work by binding
to infected cells and promoting their clearance, instead of blocking the virus
(which sports few M2 surface proteins) from infecting new cells, as traditional
vaccines are thought to do. Fiers's mice, for instance, still get sick and lose
some weight, although they do survive. Fiers argues that, given the limitations
of current seasonal flu vaccines--a regular flu vaccine matches the circulating
strain only 80% to 90% of the time and often doesn't work at all in the elderly,
whose immune systems aren't good at making new antibodies--M2 vaccines are a
possible replacement. Others, including Gerhard, see M2 vaccines as a backup to
regular vaccines, perhaps as an added component in annual flu shots.
Some experts caution that it's too early to say that M2 vaccines will work in
people, as opposed to mice. Retired New York Medical College virologist Edwin
Kilbourne, for instance, questions whether Fiers challenged mice with
sufficiently high doses of virus.
Despite the skepticism, several companies hope to commercialize M2 flu
vaccines, including Switzerland-based Cytos Biotechnology; Acambis expects to
submit a clinical trial application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) this year. Acambis's Ashley Birkett agrees that "we need to see how it
performs in the clinic." Another contender is Merck, which has done animal tests
on an M2 vaccine combined with an influenza B vaccine made from a conserved
stretch of the virus's HA, says Merck researcher Antonello Pessi.
Looking inside
Another approach to a universal flu vaccine uses conserved internal proteins
such as nucleoprotein (NP) to elicit a different kind of immunity, one based on
a type of T cell called a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) rather than on
antibodies. CTLs recognize and kill infected cells expressing viral antigens,
fragments of proteins such as NP.
CREDIT: WALTER FIERS (PHOTO)Researchers at Merck and Vical Inc., a
biotech company in San Diego, California, reported 13 years ago that a vaccine
based on NP partially protected mice from seasonal influenza A, although some
animals still died. Instead of immunizing the animals with NP itself, the
researchers used DNA encoding the protein as the vaccine, a strategy that often
generates a more powerful cellular immune response. Last year, FDA researcher
Suzanne Epstein and others showed that mice survived seasonal flu and could be
partially protected against dying from H5N1 by an NP-based DNA vaccine boosted
by ferrying the DNA into cells inside an adenovirus disabled so it can't
replicate.
Broad thinker. Belgian biochemist Walter Fiers
hopes to take advantage of the similarities among flu viruses.
Like M2 vaccines, vaccines based on internal viral proteins won't prevent
infection altogether because CTLs target already infected cells. Still, says
Epstein, they could offer some protection until a pandemic vaccine is produced.
Her group is now looking at a DNA vaccine that combines NP and M2, a strategy
also being pursued by Vical with NIAID support. Others are considering the inner
proteins not for a stand-alone vaccine but as adjuvants that could broaden the
immune response to HA-based vaccines. One overarching question is whether
long-lasting immune protection against different flu subtypes--whether through
CTLs, M2, or some other mechanism--is possible in humans. The epidemiological
data have been scanty. But Epstein recently found suggestive evidence by
analyzing old records from a study of 60 Cleveland, Ohio, families who
experienced the 1957 H2N2 flu pandemic. Epstein reports in the January 2006
Journal of Infectious Diseases that adults (but not children) who
had lab-verified H1N1 flu in the years before that pandemic were one-third as
likely to get sick with the 1957 H2N2 flu.
Narrowing in
With the two main approaches to making a truly universal flu vaccine still a
question mark, some investigators are working on a seemingly more approachable
goal: making HA-specific vaccines that protect against drift strains within the
same HA family.
One way to achieve this broad immunity is with a live attenuated vaccine,
which consists of a virus that can still infect cells and thus should induce CTL
responses. A live attenuated nasal vaccine made each year for annual flu,
FluMist, has been on the market since 2003 in the United States. Manufacturer
MedImmune says that it protects against mismatched strains. MedImmune and NIAID
will soon begin clinical testing of FluMist versions for potential pandemic
strains such as H5N1 and H9N2. The downside of live vaccines, however, is that
there is a small risk that the virus could revert to a dangerous form, perhaps
even creating a new pandemic strain.
A safer way to achieve protection against drift pandemic strains may be with
DNA encoding the HA surface protein delivered by means of a viral vector.
Compared to the traditional killed virus vaccine, this should stimulate broadly
protective CTL responses to conserved parts of the HA protein that are shared by
related strains. Separate teams at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania
and Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, both collaborating with the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia,
reported in The Lancet and the Journal of Virology in February that an
adenovirus-delivered vaccine based on H5 DNA protected against both the 1997
Hong Kong strain of H5N1 and the 2004 Vietnam strain. One advantage compared to
conventional egg-grown vaccines: The manufacturing of the vaccine is done with
cells, and "you can make millions of doses in a month's time," says Suryaprakash
Sambhara of CDC, senior author on the Lancet study.
Both universities are seeking funding for clinical tests from NIAID and
companies. Sambhara plans to give the Purdue team an adenovirus-based vaccine
containing genes for NP and M, which codes for M2 and an inner protein, as well
as H5HA; and Andrea Gambotto of Pittsburgh hopes his vaccine, which also worked
in chickens, may be picked up as a bird vaccine. A company called PowderMed
avoids using adenoviruses to deliver the DNA, which have some drawbacks, instead
using gold-coated particles and high-speed injection to get HA-based DNA
vaccines into a person's skin cells.
Although the variety of approaches to broader flu vaccines can be dizzying,
"having all of those efforts moving forward gives us more weapons in the arsenal
and makes us more likely to find the best platform," NIAID's Nabel says. Even if
one approach rises to the top, there are many obstacles ahead, such as
persuading regulatory agencies--who now approve flu vaccines based only on HA
antibody responses--to use CTL responses as a measure of efficacy instead, notes
virologist Albert Osterhaus of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Still, if universal--or at least broader--flu vaccines can make it to the
market, they could save lives during regular flu season and stave off disaster
when the next pandemic strikes.
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