| Literature DB >> 35821564 |
Jennifer Stander1, Sandiswa Mbewana1, Ann E Meyers2.
Abstract
The idea of producing vaccines in plants originated in the late 1980s. Initially, it was contemplated that this notion could facilitate the concept of edible vaccines, making them more cost effective and easily accessible. Initial studies on edible vaccines focussed on the use of a variety of different transgenic plant host species for the production of vaccine antigens. However, adequate expression levels of antigens, the difficulties predicted with administration of consistent doses, and regulatory rules required for growth of transgenic plants gave way to the development of vaccine candidates that could be purified and administered parenterally. The field has subsequently advanced with improved expression techniques including a shift from using transgenic to transient expression of antigens, refinement of purification protocols, a deeper understanding of the biological processes and a wealth of evidence of immunogenicity and efficacy of plant-produced vaccine candidates, all contributing to the successful practice of what is now known as biopharming or plant molecular farming. The establishment of this technology has resulted in the development of many different types of vaccine candidates including subunit vaccines and various different types of nanoparticle vaccines targeting a wide variety of bacterial and viral diseases. This has brought further acceptance of plants as a suitable platform for vaccine production and in this review, we discuss the most recent advances in the production of vaccines in plants for human use.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35821564 PMCID: PMC9275545 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-022-00544-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 7.744
Fig. 1Types of virus nano-particle vaccines produced in plants. a VLPs are assembled by expression of a viral capsid protein. b Chimaeric VLPs are similarly assembled by expression of a modified viral capsid protein encoded by a capsid sequence containing an inserted sequence encoding a heterologous epitope/antigen. c Antigen-display particles are assembled by expression of a particle capsid protein sequence fused to ST or SC. Antigens fused to SC or ST are expressed and added to the ST- or SC-fused particles for their display. d RICs are assembled by co-expression of an Ab HC fused at the C terminus with its cognate antigen sequence, and the corresponding Ab LC sequence. Purification of the fused Abs results in Ab-Ag complexes forming. Ab antibody, HC heavy chain, LC light chain, RIC recombinant immune complex, SC SpyCatcher, ST SpyTag, VLP virus-like particle
Examples of recently developed human vaccines in plants (within the last 5 years)
| Year reported | Target pathogen | Type of vaccine | Antigen | Plant host | Animal trials | Human trials | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Hepatitis B virus (HBV) | VLP | HBcAg | Mice—prime oral boost with lettuce stimulated predominant Th1 response with Th2 after boost | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | Hepatitis E virus (HEV) | Chimaeric VLPs | HBcAg-ORF2 AA551-AA607 immunogenic epitope | ND | ND | [ | |
| 2020 | Poliovirus (PV) | Subunit | VP1, VP2, VP3, VP4 | Mice—SC prime and oral boost with lyophilised leaf material stimulated a humoral response | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | Dengue virus (DENV) | VLPs | C-pRM-E + NSP truncated (lacking NS5) | Mice—prime-boost elicited anti-DENV1 antibodies | ND | [ | |
| 2019 | DENV | Antigen-display VLPs | HBcAg-DENV EDIII | Mice—animals showed some seroconversion | ND | [ | |
| 2018 | West Nile virus (WNV) | Soluble protein | WNV EDIII | Mice—potent humoral and cellular response and protection against WNV challenge | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | WNV | Antigen display VLPS | Phage AP205-WNV EDIII | Mice—potent humoral response | ND | [ | |
| 2020 | Zika virus (ZIKV) | RIC | ZIKV mAb and cognate Ag | Mice—strong specific antibody titers correlating with Zika neutralisation | ND | [ | |
| 2018 | Yellow fever virus (YFV) | Subunit | E alone & E fused to lichenase | Mice & monkeys—strong NAbs stimulated | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | Rotavirus (RV) | VLPs | VP2, VP6, VP7 | Rats—stimulated robust Nabs | Adults, toddlers and infants—IgG response and NAbs in infants | [ | |
| 2020 | Norovirus (NoV) | Not specified | Not specified | ND | Adults >18 years—results not yet available | [ | |
| 2022 | NoV | VLPs | GI & GIII.4 capsid proteins | Rabbits—stimulated strong specific antibody and blocking antibody titers | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | Rabies virus (RABV) | Subunit | RG2 protein | Mice—stimulated strong specific antibody titers | ND | [ | |
| 2022 | Anthrax | Subunit | Bacillus anthracis pp-PA83 | Mice & rabbits—strong NAbs stimulated Rabbits—protection against | Adults >18 years— seroconverted | [ | |
| 2018 | Malaria | VLPs | Pfs25 protein | Mice—strong humoral response and transmission blocking activity | Adults >18 years—good antibody responses but low transmission reducing activity | [ | |
| 2019 | Human papillomavirus (HPV) | Chimaeric VLPs | HPV-16 L1-L2 | Mice—stimulated HPV-16 L1 NAbs and cross-protection against HPV-58 and -18 | ND | [ | |
| 2018/2021 | Influenza virus | VLPs | H5N1 of 4 different circulating strains—quadrivalent vaccine | Mice—strong immunity and protection against challenge | Adults >18 years—strong HI antibody titers and CD4+ T-cell response | [ | |
| 2021 | Influenza virus | VLPs | H5N1 quadrivalent vaccine | ND | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | SARS-CoV-2 | VLPs | Modified S1 glycoprotein | ND | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | SARS-CoV-2 | Antigen display VLPs | CoV-RBD121 | Mice—strong NAbs stimulated | Approval for Phase I | [ | |
| 2021 | SARS-CoV-2 | VLPs | E, M & S1 | ND | ND | [ | |
| 2020 | SARS-CoV-2 | Soluble protein | S1, RBD & N | Mice—antigen-specific immunogenicity | ND | [ | |
| 2022 | SARS-CoV-2 | Soluble protein | Truncated S1 | Mice—low cellular and humoral immunogenicity | ND | [ | |
| 2021 | SARS-CoV-2 | Subunit | RBD fused to human IgG1-Fc | Mice & monkeys—strong NAbs stimulated | ND | [ |
EdIII envelope protein domain III, HBcAg hepatitis B core antigen, mAb monoclonal antibody, NAbs neutralising antibodies, ND not done, NSP non-structural protein, RBD receptor-binding domain, RIC recombinant immune complex, SC subcutaneous, VLP virus-like particle, WNV West Nile virus
Fig. 2Examples of antigen-display particles and VLPs. a ST-fused phage AP205 particles displaying SC-fused WNV EdIII produced in N. benthamiana. b HPV VLPs produced in N. benthamina by expression of HPV L1 capsid protein. EdIII envelope protein domain III, HPV human papillomavirus, SC SpyCatcher, ST SpyTag, VLP virus-like particle, WNV West Nile virus
| Plants are becoming an accepted platform for the development of vaccine production. | |
| A wide variety of human vaccine targets have been explored with promising outcomes. | |
| Both influenza and SARS-CoV-2 have provided ideal opportunities to prove the applicability of the platform with encouraging results of plant-produced vaccines from phase III trials and authorisation for human use in Canada. |