Horizon and Pirbright Institute support research into improvement of vaccine yields

Horizon Discovery Group plc, a global leader in the application of gene editing and gene modulation to deliver inspired cell solutions, today announces that it has extended its biomanufacturing capabilities through an agreement with The Pirbright Institute to jointly work on a research programme aimed at deploying cell engineering to increase the yields of livestock vaccines.

  • Extends Horizon’s biomanufacturing capabilities into vaccine manufacture
  • Research supported by a grant from the Canadian International Development Research Centre, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation

 

The development of efficient and affordable vaccines against viral diseases plays an important role in meeting the rapidly growing demand in the AgBio market, where global production is persistently reduced through viral infection and where the consequences of an outbreak can be devastating.

 

Many vaccines are produced in avian systems, both in hen’s eggs and increasingly in cultured cells, however yields are often  limited by immune responses that can prevent the replication of vaccine viruses. The Pirbright Institute was first to describe a set of immune proteins in chickens, called chIFITMs, which interfere with viral replication in cells.  The Institute has now received a grant from the Livestock Vaccine Innovation Fund which is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Global Affairs Canada, and Canada’s International Development Research Centre, to support the practical development of this research. 

 

Horizon will use its expertise in CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to remove the chIFITM genes in chicken cells, thereby overcoming one of the main barriers for viral replication with the potential to boost the levels of vaccine virus produced between five and ten-fold. Vaccines produced in avian systems represent an approximately $3.4 billion market1. A significant increase in yield may lead to a substantial decrease in manufacturing costs and pricing.  The project is set to run for four years and this new technology could be commercially available by 2021.

 

Richard Vellacott, Interim CEO and CFO, Horizon Discovery, commented: “As a global leader in the application of gene editing to harness the power of the cell, Horizon is transforming the life sciences both in human biology and beyond.  We are now extending our biomanufacturing expertise into the agriculture market where there is an acute need to protect and improve yields, driven by a rapidly growing global population and increasing environmental pressures. We are pleased to partner with The Pirbright Institute in this project which promises to have a significant impact on vulnerable populations worldwide.”

 

Dr Mark Fife, research lead and Head of the Genetics and Genomics group, The Pirbright Institute, said:“The increase in yield sought from this project will make vaccines cheaper to produce and more accessible to livestock owners in developing nations. We will first focus on increasing flu vaccine yields, but the technique can be applied to multiple livestock viral diseases and potentially human diseases as well. Once this technique, for which a patent application has been filed, has been successfully piloted, The Pirbright Institute intends to work with commercial partners, such as Horizon Discovery, who will help bring this new technology to market."

 

1.     Global Markets and Manufacturing Technologies for Protein Drugs, BCC Research, May 2016

 

Glossary:

Biomanufacturing: A type of manufacturing that utilises biological systems to produce commercially important biomaterials and biomolecules for use in medicines

CRISPR: A gene editing technology that enables genomic modifications in a wide variety of organisms and tissues with high efficiency

Vaccine: An antigenic substance prepared from the causative agent of a disease or a synthetic substitute, used to provide immunity against one or several diseases

 

 

About The Pirbright Institute   www.pirbright.ac.uk

The Pirbright Institute is a world leading centre of excellence in research and surveillance of virus diseases of farm animals and viruses that spread from animals to humans. Based in the UK and receiving strategic funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), the Institute works to enhance capability to contain, control and eliminate these economically and medically important diseases through highly innovative fundamental and applied bioscience.

With an annual income of nearly £26.1 million from grants and commercial activity, and a total of £5 million strategic investment from BBSRC during 2016-2017, the Institute contributes to global food security and health, improving quality of life for animals and peop



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