SBIR-STTR Award

Live Attenuated Oral Typhoid-Shigellosis Vaccine
Award last edited on: 6/10/16

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIAID
Total Award Amount
$609,197
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
-----

Principal Investigator
B Kim Lee Sim

Company Information

Protein Potential LLC

9800 Medical Center Drive Suite A209
Rockville, MD 20850
   (301) 576-3060
   info@protpot.com
   www.proteinpotential.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 08
County: Montgomery

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43AI106158-01A1
Start Date: 3/1/15    Completed: 2/28/17
Phase I year
2015
Phase I Amount
$307,387
Vaccines are a rational and cost-effective means for protecting against infectious diseases in travelers, military personnel, and in endemic developing country populations. Our goal in this proposal is to address several significant vaccine needs: 1) the need for an easy-to-administer (needle-free) and safe oral vaccine vector platform for stable expression and delivery of multiple foreign antigens, that generates long term efficacy following a rapid immunization regimen and which can be distributed without the need for refrigeration; 2) the lack of a licensed vaccine for prevention of morbidity and mortality due o shigellosis; and 3) development of a multivalent oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against multiple disease agents (i.e. enteric fever plus the major causes of shigellosis). To address these challenges, we exploit the extensive safety record of the existing live, oral, attenuated Salmonella Typhi Ty21a typhoid vaccine by utilizing it as our lead candidate vector to develop a combination oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against both typhoid fever (with cross-protection against some paratyphoid fevers) and shigellosis. Further, we hypothesize that this vaccine can be formulated to be safe, stable, and highly immunogenic and can be easily administered orally. The current proposal is aimed at creating multivalent vaccine strains Ty21a expressing S. sonnei form 1 O polysaccharide (Ty21a-Ss) and Ty21a-expressing S. flexneri 2a form 1 O polysaccharide (Ty21a-Sf2a). We will also create acid resistant Ty21a-Ss and Ty21a-Sf2a by adding Shigella glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) genes into vaccine candidates and fully characterize each strain genetically and biochemically. Immunogenicity and protective efficacy against S. Typhi (Ty2), S. sonnei (53G) and S. flexneri 2a (2457T) in mice of Ty21a-Ss, Ty21a-Sf2a, Ty21a-Ss-GAD and Ty21a-Sf2a-GAD will be assessed by immunization via intranasal installation of doses followed by mucosal challenge. In Phase II, we will conduct similar work for S. flexneri 3a and 6, finalize a temperature-stable dried product as rapidly dissolvable wafers or tablets, conduct all pre-clinical IND enabling studies, finalize a clinical protocol, and submit an IND. This Phase I project will provide the foundation for the Phase II to complete construction of a quadrivalent anti-shigellosis vaccine that will protect against more than 85% of shigellosis worldwide.

Public Health Relevance Statement:


Public Health Relevance:
Our goal is to develop a multivalent oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against multiple disease agents, is easy-to-administer (needle-free), is a safe oral vaccine vector platform for stable expression and delivery of multiple foreign antigens, that generates long term efficacy following a rapid immunization regimen and which can be distributed without the need for refrigeration. To address these challenges, we exploit the extensive safety record of the existing live, oral, attenuated Salmonella Typhi Ty21a typhoid vaccine by utilizing it as our lead candidate vector to develop a combination oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against both typhoid fever (with cross-protection against some paratyphoid fevers) and shigellosis. We hypothesize that this vaccine can be formulated to be safe, stable, highly immunogenic and can be easily administered orally.

Project Terms:
Acids; Address; Antibiotic Resistance; Antibodies; Antigens; Attenuated; Chromosomal Insertion; Chromosomes; Clinical Protocols; Communicable Diseases; cost effective; Cysteine; design; Developing Countries; Development; Disease; Dose; Foundations; Generations; Genes; Genetic; genome sequencing; Glutamate Decarboxylase; Goals; Immunization; immunogenic; immunogenicity; indexing; intraperitoneal; Investigational New Drug Application; Lead; Licensing; Life; meetings; Methods; Military Personnel; Morbidity - disease rate; Mortality Vital Statistics; Mus; Needles; Nose; O Antigens; Oral; oral vaccine; Paratyphoid Fever; Phase; Phase I Clinical Trials; Phenotype; Polysaccharides; Population; pre-clinical; Prevention; Production; protective efficacy; public health relevance; Refrigeration; Regimen; Resistance; Safety; Salmonella typhi; Sequence Analysis; Serotyping; Shigella; Shigella flexneri bacterium; Shigella Infections; Shigella sonnei bacterium; Tablets; Temperature; Tryptophan; Ty21a typhoid vaccine; Typhoid Fever; vaccine candidate; Vaccines; Valine; vector; Work

Phase II

Contract Number: 5R43AI106158-02
Start Date: 3/1/15    Completed: 2/28/17
Phase II year
2016
Phase II Amount
$301,810
Vaccines are a rational and cost-effective means for protecting against infectious diseases in travelers, military personnel, and in endemic developing country populations. Our goal in this proposal is to address several significant vaccine needs: 1) the need for an easy-to-administer (needle-free) and safe oral vaccine vector platform for stable expression and delivery of multiple foreign antigens, that generates long term efficacy following a rapid immunization regimen and which can be distributed without the need for refrigeration; 2) the lack of a licensed vaccine for prevention of morbidity and mortality due o shigellosis; and 3) development of a multivalent oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against multiple disease agents (i.e. enteric fever plus the major causes of shigellosis). To address these challenges, we exploit the extensive safety record of the existing live, oral, attenuated Salmonella Typhi Ty21a typhoid vaccine by utilizing it as our lead candidate vector to develop a combination oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against both typhoid fever (with cross-protection against some paratyphoid fevers) and shigellosis. Further, we hypothesize that this vaccine can be formulated to be safe, stable, and highly immunogenic and can be easily administered orally. The current proposal is aimed at creating multivalent vaccine strains Ty21a expressing S. sonnei form 1 O polysaccharide (Ty21a-Ss) and Ty21a-expressing S. flexneri 2a form 1 O polysaccharide (Ty21a-Sf2a). We will also create acid resistant Ty21a-Ss and Ty21a-Sf2a by adding Shigella glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) genes into vaccine candidates and fully characterize each strain genetically and biochemically. Immunogenicity and protective efficacy against S. Typhi (Ty2), S. sonnei (53G) and S. flexneri 2a (2457T) in mice of Ty21a-Ss, Ty21a-Sf2a, Ty21a-Ss-GAD and Ty21a-Sf2a-GAD will be assessed by immunization via intranasal installation of doses followed by mucosal challenge. In Phase II, we will conduct similar work for S. flexneri 3a and 6, finalize a temperature-stable dried product as rapidly dissolvable wafers or tablets, conduct all pre-clinical IND enabling studies, finalize a clinical protocol, and submit an IND. This Phase I project will provide the foundation for the Phase II to complete construction of a quadrivalent anti-shigellosis vaccine that will protect against more than 85% of shigellosis worldwide.

Public Health Relevance Statement:


Public Health Relevance:
Our goal is to develop a multivalent oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against multiple disease agents, is easy-to-administer (needle-free), is a safe oral vaccine vector platform for stable expression and delivery of multiple foreign antigens, that generates long term efficacy following a rapid immunization regimen and which can be distributed without the need for refrigeration. To address these challenges, we exploit the extensive safety record of the existing live, oral, attenuated Salmonella Typhi Ty21a typhoid vaccine by utilizing it as our lead candidate vector to develop a combination oral vaccine that will simultaneously protect against both typhoid fever (with cross-protection against some paratyphoid fevers) and shigellosis. We hypothesize that this vaccine can be formulated to be safe, stable, highly immunogenic and can be easily administered orally.

Project Terms:
Acids; Address; Antibiotic Resistance; Antibodies; Antigens; Attenuated; Chromosomal Insertion; Chromosomes; Clinical Protocols; Communicable Diseases; cost effective; Cysteine; design; Developing Countries; Development; Disease; Dose; Foundations; Generations; Genes; Genetic; genome sequencing; Glutamate Decarboxylase; Goals; Health; Immunization; immunogenic; immunogenicity; indexing; intraperitoneal; Investigational New Drug Application; Lead; Licensing; Life; meetings; Methods; Military Personnel; Morbidity - disease rate; mortality; Mus; Needles; Nose; O Antigens; Oral; oral vaccine; Paratyphoid Fever; Phase; Phase I Clinical Trials; Phenotype; Polysaccharides; Population; pre-clinical; Prevention; Production; protective efficacy; Refrigeration; Regimen; Resistance; Safety; Salmonella typhi; Sequence Analysis; Serotyping; Shigella; Shigella flexneri bacterium; Shigella Infections; Shigella sonnei bacterium; Tablets; Temperature; Tryptophan; Ty21a typhoid vaccine; Typhoid Fever; vaccine candidate; Vaccines; Valine; vector; Work