Developing New Vaccine Against Three Biothreat Pathogens

“The development of such a vaccine presents exciting technical challenges associated with understanding the interactions of the vaccine components with each other and with our immune system, as well as in the manufacturing and testing of such vaccine formulations. We are thrilled to be part of this first step in looking at the feasibility of such an approach,” Rasley added.

Fischer noted, “We are gratified that our nanotechnology platform is being widely tested and applied to a wider range of difficult-to-treat pathogens and diseases. This effort mirrors the F. tularensis vaccine development we started in 2019.”

In addition to the four institutions, a Bay Area vaccine company — San Carlos-based Vaxcyte, Inc. — will produce Yersina pestis and F. tularensis antigens in a manner that is scalable and amenable to production in a “good manufacturing practices” environment.

The team’s scientists will build on a nanotechnology — called nanolipoprotein particles (NLPs) — that was developed at LLNL for delivering vaccines and drugs inside the human body.

NLPs are water-soluble molecules that are 6 to 30 billionths of a meter in size and resemble HDL particles, which are associated with playing a role in regulating the human body’s good cholesterol. LLNL scientists have worked on this nanotechnology, also known as nanodisc, since 2005.

Using the NLPs as a delivery platform, the antigens for the three disease-causing bacteria could be co-delivered with an adjuvant molecule, which stimulates the immune response against the antigens.

Terry Wu, a tularemia expert at UNMHSC, said, “We are excited to expand our collaboration with LLNL to develop subunit vaccines important for national defense and public health.”

Wu and his UNMHSC team will provide expertise to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the multi-pathogen vaccine against pneumonic tularemia.

At Fort Detrick, Md.-based USAMRIID, Joel Bozue and Christopher Cote will provide immunological characterizations of novel vaccines and perform efficacy studies using a mouse model of pneumonic plague.

Additional USAMRIID studies will test the LLNL tularemia vaccine to determine if it is able to protect rats in a pneumonic tularemia model against a diverse panel of F. tularensis strains from clinical and environmental samples.

UNR Med researchers Paul Brett and Mary Burtnick, who have more than 50 years combined experience studying the pathogenic Burkholderia species, will provide their expertise on Burkholderia pseudomallei for the multi-pathogen vaccine.

F. tularensis is classified as a class A high-priority pathogen and Tier 1 select agent by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). It is considered a potential biothreat agent based on its extremely low infectious dose. Disease manifestations vary depending on the route of exposure. It is an infectious disease that can cause fever, skin ulcers, enlarged lymph nodes, pneumonia and throat infection with inhalational disease (pulmonary tularemia) being most severe.

Plague is an infectious disease responsible for killing millions during the Middle Ages and is caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. While antibiotic treatment is effective against plague, the disease is associated with high mortality rates when contracted via inhalation (pneumonic plague). Due to its extreme virulence, ability to be aerosolized and previous historical use as a bioweapon, it is classified as a Tier 1 select agent by the CDC. Plague continues to be endemic worldwide.

Melioidosis is an infectious disease, predominant in tropical climates, caused by the bacterium B. pseudomallei. Melioidosis is typically contracted through inhalation of contaminated dust or water droplets or through contact with contaminated soil. Antibiotic treatment for melioidosis is prolonged, often three to eight months, and the disease is associated with high mortality rates when contracted via inhalation. The CDC classifies B. pseudomallei as a Tier 1 select agent.

In 2019, LLNL and two other institutions (UNMHSC and the Tulane National Primate Research Center) received a five-year, $7.5 million grant from DTRA to accelerate the testing of an NLP-based tularemia vaccine.

In addition to Fischer and Rasley, other LLNL biomedical scientists who are part of the team working to develop the multi-pathogen vaccine are Sean Gilmore, Sandra Peters and Dina Weilhammer.