| Literature DB >> 35265332 |
Carrie J Chen1, Anna F Hudson1, Allison S Jia1, Caitlin R Kunchur1, Andrew J Song1, Edward Tran1, Chris J Fisher2, Davide Zanchi3, Lucia Lee4, Stephen Kargotich5, Mary Romeo5, Ana Koperniku4, Ravinder D Pamnani6, Daria Mochly-Rosen4,5.
Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 exposed a global problem, as highly effective vaccines are challenging to produce and distribute, particularly in regions with limited resources and funding. As an alternative, immunoglobulins produced in eggs of immunized hens (IgY) can be a simple and inexpensive source for a topical and temporary prophylaxis. Here, we developed a method to extract and purify IgY antibodies from egg yolks of hens immunized against viral pathogen-derived proteins using low-cost, readily available materials, for use in resource-limited settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35265332 PMCID: PMC8877785 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.12.05009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Summary of the IgY purification procedure. Panel A. Summary of steps in the IgY purification process. Panel B. Image of yolk separation from albumen, using an egg separator; leftover albumen are pulled off from under the separator using gloved hands. Panel C. 125 mL bottle filled with final solution from B. Panel D. Image of removal of yolk aggregates by filtration, after acidification and freezing of the mixture; yellow residues remained in the Whatman filter paper and the filtered solution in the bottle was clear. Panel E. Image of the makeshift centrifuge (left) and the final precipitated pellet in the 15 mL tubes.
Figure 2Experimental confirmation of IgY purification. Panel A. Stain-free SDS-PAGE of lane 1-4: preparations of purified IgY using the new protocol. Lane 5; purified ovalbumin from the albumen. Each at 0.5 ug protein/lane. The upper and lower proteins in lanes 1-4 are the heavy and the light chains of IgY, respectively. Panel B. Western Blot analysis with anti-IgY and anti-ovalbumin identifying the heavy chain of IgY in lanes 1-4 (upper band) and ovalbumin (lower band), in lane 5. The levels of ovalbumin in the IgY preparations (lanes 1-4) were almost undetected (compared to lane 5; purified albumin) especially in the later preparations (lanes 3,4).
Kit materials and cost estimate
| Material | Disposable? | Price/Bulk | Price/Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Yes | (1L × US$200)/(100 × 30) | US$0.06 |
|
| |||
| Hen | No | US$3.76 | US$3.76 |
| Monthly cost of hen | No | US$4.50 | US$4.50 |
|
| |||
| White vinegar (4 drops) | Yes | US$0.02 (US$0.02/fl oz) | US$0.02 |
| Boiled water | Yes |
|
|
| Table salt (sodium chloride) (11g) | Yes | US$0.02 | US$0.02 |
| Pipette × 2 | Yes | US$0.04 × 2 = US$0.08 | US$0.08 |
| Disinfectant wipes (Chlorox) | Yes | US$0.08 | US$0.08 |
| Whatman filter paper (150 mm diameter) | Yes | US$0.07 | US$0.07 |
| Metal funnel | No | US$6.90 | US$6.90 |
| pH strips | Yes | (US$0.14 × ~ 6) = US$0.84 | US$0.84 |
| Toothpick | Yes | US$0.00 | US$0.00 |
| Baking soda (1/1000) | Yes | US$0.58 | US$0.00 |
| Egg separator | No | US$2.49 | US$2.49 |
| 15 mL centrifuge tube (disposable) | Yes | US$0.25 × 4 = US$1.00 | US$1.00 |
| 125 mL glass bottle | No | US$2.85 × 2 = US$5.7 | US$5.70 |
| Nose droppers | Yes | US$0.62 × 2 | US$1.24 |
| Food processor (Hamilton Beach, Model No. 70740) | No | US$44.99 | US$44.99 |
| 3D printed attachment (57grams) | Yes | US$1.10 | US$1.10 |
| Ender 3 3D printer | No | US$189.00 | US$189.00 |
| Nasal sprayer | Yes | US$1 | US$1.00 |
| Gloves (2 per prep) | Yes | US$0.1699 × 2 = US$0.33 | US$0.33 |
| Total kit (disposable) | US$5.84 |
|
|
| TOTAL KIT × 100 eggs | US$584.36 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| COST of 100 HENS + HOUSING | US$826.00 |
|
|
| Total kit + non-disposable + hens | US$1656.95 |
|
|
|
|
| ||
Figure 3Components of the IgY kit. All kit materials listed in are shown not to scale. All kit materials except the food processor easily fit into a small (15 × 15 × 15 inch) box.
Cost estimate of IgY production at a commercial facility
| Material | Total price | Price/100 eggs |
|---|---|---|
| Preparation of protein | (1L × US$200)/(100 × 30) | US$100.00 |
| Hen and housing & IgY extraction | 1 hen at US$28 000 for 8 mo | US$11 666.66 |
| Cost of formulation and fill | 840 eggs at US$10 000 | US$1190.48 |
| Batch release test | 840 eggs at US$1000 | US$119.05 |
| Vials | 1600 vials at US$1000 (3.75 doses per vial) | US$416.69 |
| TOTAL COST per 100 eggs | US$13 492.88 |
|
|
|
|
Figure 4High-level implementation of the new IgY protocol and required facilities. A scheme illustrating the implementation of the IgY purification process in two LMIC settings: Laboratory equipped with centrifuges; and a rural facility with electricity, a freezer and running water. The chosen recombinant protein (immunogen) can be produced in a specialized academic or industry laboratory and shipped for immunization as dry material (highly stable and requires no special refrigeration). Hens can then be centrally immunized by a vet, or by rural hen growers, and the resultant IgY-containing eggs can be purified either in a central facility or at a rural setting. The centrifugation step can be performed either at the central laboratory facility, equipped with a centrifuge, or locally, using our repurposed centrifugation device and printed adapter. Finally, the purified IgY is formulated into dropper bottles and can be used intranasally.