| Literature DB >> 35284578 |
K Savina1, Rakhy Sreekumar1, V K Soonu1, E J Variyar1.
Abstract
Background: With the emergence of Corona virus Disease-2019, a novel worldwide health disaster is threatening the population. The WHO declared COVID-19 as a pandemic in December 2019, when it first surfaced in Hunan seafood market in Wuhan, South China, and quickly spread far and wide. Different corona virus variants are currently causing concern all across the world. Main body: It has become critical for our scientists to develop a viable method to prevent infection or the pandemic from spreading globally. Antiviral medicines, oxygen therapy, and immune system stimulation are all used to treat the condition. SARS-CoV-2 undergoes mutation and due to evolutionary pressures, different mutant strains caused various symptoms in different geographical regions and the epidemic is spreading and becoming more fragile, posing a greater risk of mortality. Vaccines are tools to increase our immunity as a precaution, and increasing the global immunization rate can help improve the situation. Recent developments in the field of vaccine platforms are discussed here. Short conclusion: Vaccines are of highest priority to control and eradicate the viral infectious disease COVID-19 more than any other protective solutions. A number of mutations have occurred and some variants such as alpha, beta, gamma, and delta, and it has now progressed to the new version Omicron, which is a variant of concern. Booster doses are anticipated to function as a barrier to the capacity of the most recent known variety, and more research is needed to determine how effective they will be. This page discusses various technologies employed in the field of COVID-19 vaccine, as well as potential barriers and recent developments in this field.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Infection; LAV; RBD; Vaccines
Year: 2022 PMID: 35284578 PMCID: PMC8899459 DOI: 10.1186/s43088-022-00215-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beni Suef Univ J Basic Appl Sci ISSN: 2314-8535
Fig. 1SARS-CoV-2 structure (Reprinted from “Human Coronavirus Structure”, by BioRender, August 2020, retrieved from https://app.biorender.com/biorender-templates/figures/5e99f5395fd61e0028682c01/t-5f21e90283765600b08fbe9d-human-coronavirus-structure Copyright 2022 by BioRender.)
Fig. 2Various approaches of SARS- CoV-2 viral vaccine development (Reprinted from “Approaches to Viral Vaccine Development”, by BioRender, February 2020, retrieved from https://app.biorender.com/biorender-templates/figures/5e99f5395fd61e0028682c01/t-5e6256cdd7f17b0088a993d3-approaches-to-viral-vaccine-development Copyright 2022 by BioRender.)
Fig. 3Some of the clinical phase vaccine candidates for COVID-19 (Reprinted from “Clinical Phase Vaccine Candidates for COVID-19”, by BioRender, April 2020, retrieved from https://app.biorender.com/biorender-templates/figures/5e99f5395fd61e0028682c01/t-5ea83be2d3420200adea0b6a-clinical-phase-vaccine-candidates-for-covid-19 Copyright 2022 by BioRender.)
Various platforms of COVID-19 vaccines, types of vaccines, manufacturers and the phases it approached
| Vaccine Platforms | Type of vaccines | Developers | Phases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inactivated viruses | VLA2001 | Valneva, National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom | III |
| TURKOVAC, | Erciyes University and the Health Institute Of Turkey (TUSEV) | III | |
| CovIral-Varkat | Shifa Pharmed Industrial Co | II/III | |
| Vero cell, BBIBP-CorV | Sinopharm | IV | |
| Inactivated (NDV-based) chimeric vaccine with or without the adjuvant CpG 1018 | The Government Pharmaceutical Organization (GPO); PATH; Dynavax | I/II | |
| Inactivated COVID-19 vaccine | KM Biologics Co., Ltd | II/III | |
| Live attenuated virus | COVI-VAC | Codagenix/Serum Institute of India | III |
| MV-014-212 | Meissa Vaccines, Inc | I | |
| DNA based vaccines | COVIGEN | University of Sydney, Bionet Co., Ltd Technovalia | I |
| COVID-eVax | Takis + Rottapharm Biotech | I/II | |
| INO4800 + electropor-ation | Inovio Pharmaceuticals + International Vaccine Institute + Advaccine | III | |
| AG0301-COVID19 | AnGes + Takara Bio + Osaka University | II/III | |
| CORVax-12 | OncoSec Immunotherapies; Providence Health & Services | I | |
| GX-19N | Genexine Consortium | II/III | |
| GLS-5310 | Gene One Life Science, Inc | I/II | |
| Protein subunit | VAT00008 | Sanofi Pasteur + GSK | III |
| Recombinant SARS-CoV-2 Fusion Protein Vaccine (V-01) | Livzon Pharmaceutical | III | |
| Recombinant SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (CHO Cell) | Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, AnhuiZhifeiLongcom Biopharmaceutical | III | |
| CIGB-66 (RBD + aluminium hydroxide) | Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB) | III | |
| RecombinantSars-CoV-2 Spike protein, Aluminumadjuvanted (Nanocovax) | Nanogen Pharmaceutical Biotechnology | III | |
| EpiVac Corona | Federal Budgetary Research Institution State Research Center of Virology and Biotechnology "Vector" | III | |
| RNA based vaccines | mRNA-1273, mRNA-1273.351 | Moderna + National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) | IV |
| BNT162b2 (3 LNP-mRNAs), also known as "Comirnaty" | Pfizer/BioNTech + Fosun Pharma | IV | |
| CVnCoV Vaccine | CureVac AG | III | |
| ARCT-021 | Arcturus Therapeutics | II | |
| LNP-nCoVsaRNA | Imperial College London | I | |
| Chula Cov19 mRNA vaccine | Chulalongkorn University | I | |
| SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine (ARCoV) | Academy of Military Science (AMS), Walvax Biotechnology and Suzhou Abogen Biosciences | III | |
| Viral vector (non-replicating) | Recombinant novel coronavirus vaccine(Adenovirus type 5 vector) | CanSino Biological Inc./Beijing Institute of Biotechnology | IV |
| Sputnik V (Gam-COVID-Vac) Adeno-based (rAd26-S + rAd5-S) | Gamaleya Research Institute; Health Ministry of the Russian Federation | III | |
| Ad26.COV2.S | Janssen Pharmaceutical | IV | |
| GRAd-COV2 (Replication defective Simian Adenovirus (GRAd encoding S) | ReiThera + Leukocare + Univercells | II/III | |
| VXA-CoV2-1 Ad5 adjuvanted Oral Vaccine platform | Vaxart | II | |
| MVA-SARS-2-S | University of Munich (Ludwig-Maximilians) | I | |
| Viral Vectors (Replicating) | DelNS1-2019-nCoV-RBD-OPT1 (Intranasalflu- based-RBD) | University of Hong Kong, Xiamen University and Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy | III |
| rVSV-SARS-CoV-2-S Vaccine | Israel Institute for Biological Research | II/III | |
| Virus like particle | Corona virus- Like Particle COVID-19 (CoVLP) | Medicago Inc | III |
| RBD SARS-CoV-2 HBsAg VLP vaccine | Serum Institute of India + Accelagen Pty + SpyBiotech | I/II | |
| VBI-2902a | VBI Vaccines Inc | I/II | |
| SARS-CoV-2 VLP Vaccine | The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey | II | |
| ABNCoV2 capsid virus-like particle (cVLP) ± adjuvant MF59 | Radboud University | I |
The data is taken from the site of WHO vaccines in clinical development https://www.who.int/teams/blueprint/covid-19/covid-19-vaccine-tracker-and-landscape