An adjuvant made in yeast could lower vaccine cost and boost availability (2024)

Vaccines save lives, as proven during the recent pandemic, but one component of most vaccines — including the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine — goes unheralded: a molecule or other compound that primes the immune system to mount a more robust defense against infection.

These so-called adjuvants are added in small quantities but have a big protective effect, particularly in infants with immature immune systems and older people with a declining immune response.

Yet, one of the strongest adjuvants, an extract of the Chilean soap bark plant, is so difficult to produce that it costs several hundred million dollars per kilogram (2.2 pounds).

University of California, Berkeley, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) scientists have now wielded the power of synthetic biology to produce the active ingredient of soap bark, a molecule called QS-21, in yeast. Producing compounds like this in yeast is not only cheaper, but more environmentally friendly, avoiding many of the caustic and toxic chemicals needed to extract the compound from plants.

While yields from the yeast-based process are still small — a few hundred dollars’ worth from a liter of broth — the feat promises to make one of the most effective adjuvants available more broadly and to lower the cost of vaccines, in general.

"During the pandemic, public health officers were really worried about QS-21 adjuvant availability because that only comes from one tree," said Jay Keasling, UC Berkeley professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and senior faculty scientist at Berkeley Lab. "From a world health perspective, there's a lot of need for an alternative source of this adjuvant."

The production of QS-21 involved the insertion of 38 different genes from six organisms into yeast — building one of the longest biosynthetic pathways ever transplanted into any organism, Keasling said.

“The production of the potent vaccine adjuvant QS-21 in yeast highlights the power of synthetic biology to address both major environmental, as well as human, health challenges,” said former UC Berkeley postdoctoral fellow Yuzhong Liu, first author of the paper and now an assistant professor at Scripps Research in La Jolla, California.

The results were published May 8 in the journal Nature.

Building upon malaria work

The benefit of adding an adjuvant to a vaccine was first noted in the 1920s, when alum — an aluminum salt — was discovered to boost the effectiveness of a diphtheria vaccine. Alum has since been added to many vaccines that use a portion of a pathogen — though not the infectious part — to induce immunity. Because adjuvants make vaccines more effective, they also allow doctors to use smaller doses of the active ingredient, called an antigen.

An adjuvant made in yeast could lower vaccine cost and boost availability (1)

Bianca Susara, Berkeley Lab

Not long after alum was discovered to boost the effectiveness of vaccines, a group of soap-like molecules was found to do the same. By the 1960s, researchers had focused on an extract of the Chilean soapbark tree (Quillaja saponaria) that strongly activates different components of the immune system to amplify the effect of giving a vaccine antigen alone. For the last 25 years, one component of that extract — QS-21 — has been one of the main non-aluminum adjuvants in vaccines, having been tested in more than 120 clinical trials. It is found in the shingles vaccine (Shingrix) given to older adults, a malaria vaccine (Mosquirix) currently used in children to protect against the parasite Plasmodium falciparum, and the Novavax SARS-COVID-19 vaccine.

QS-21 is produced today by stripping bark from the tree and chemically extracting and separating its many compounds, some of which are toxic. Though QS-21 is a complex molecule containing a terpene core and eight sugar molecules, it has been synthesized in the laboratory. But that synthesis takes 79 separate steps, starting from an intermediate chemical that itself has to be synthesized.

Keasling, who is the CEO of the U.S. Department of Energy-funded Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) in Emeryville, Calif., was asked to try to recreate the synthesis process in yeast because he has worked for years adding genes to yeast to get them to make terpene compounds, among them artemisinin, an antimalarial drug, but also scents and flavorings. Terpene compounds, like those responsible for the scent of pine trees, are often fragrant.

"This work builds on our malaria work," he said. "We worked on the malaria therapy. Now, this could be an adjuvant for the malaria vaccines in the future."

Adding the eight sugars proved challenging, as did balancing unsuspected interactions among enzymes in yeast. All this had to be accomplished without throwing off critical metabolic pathways that are needed for yeast growth.

"It has eight sugars and a terpenoid in the middle. I mean, it makes the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway look like nothing," Keasling said. "I am gratified that synthetic biology has come so far that we can now build a pathway to produce a molecule like QS-21. It’s a testament to how far the field has progressed in the last two decades."

He and his lab colleagues, led by postdoctoral fellow Liu, worked closely with plant researcher Anne Osbourn at the John Innes Center in the United Kingdom. Osbourn had earlier teased out the many enzymatic steps involved in the soapbark tree's production of natural QS-21. Over the past five years, as Osbourn discovered new steps in the process and tested them in tobacco plants, Keasling's lab gradually added these new genes to yeast to replicate the synthetic steps.

"It was a great collaboration, because as soon as she'd get a new gene in the pathway, they'd send it our way, and we'd put it into yeast," Keasling said. "It was also good for her, because she got a test of whether her tobacco assay was telling her the right thing."

'Everything from a single sugar'

Earlier this year, Osbourn and Keasling published the complete 20-step process by which the soapbark tree makes QS-21, reconstituted in tobacco. Unfortunately, tobacco is a test bed for plant chemistry, but not a scalable way to produce a chemical compound.

The new paper reconstitutes that process in yeast, with additional steps added because yeast do not contain some enzymes that naturally exist in plants. Currently, a liter of the fermenting bioengineered yeast can produce about 100 micrograms of QS-21 in three days, with a market value of about $200. But yeast biosynthesis is scalable.

"Even at the levels we're producing it, it's cheaper than producing it from the plant," Keasling said.

The engineered yeast subsist only on sugar, which is an added advantage, he said.

"My whole thing is, I want to make everything from a single sugar. I just want to feed yeast glucose, because eventually we want this process to be scaled. And if you feed them a bunch of fancy intermediates, then it's going to result in a process that is not scalable," Keasling said. "In the end, I'd like to start with glucose, so when the production is performed in large tanks, they're able to produce QS-21 as easily and inexpensively as possible."

While Keasling plans to leave optimization of the process for large-scale production to others, he does hope to tweak the enzymatic steps he has introduced into yeast to produce variants of QS-21 that could potentially be more effective than QS-21. And yeast biosynthesis allows him to experiment with pruning the QS-21 molecule to see which portions can be eliminated without altering the molecule’s effectiveness.

The research was funded by an industrial grant.

RELATED INFORMATION

An adjuvant made in yeast could lower vaccine cost and boost availability (2024)

FAQs

An adjuvant made in yeast could lower vaccine cost and boost availability? ›

While yields from the yeast-based process are still small -- a few hundred dollars' worth from a liter of broth -- the feat promises to make one of the most effective adjuvants available more broadly and to lower the cost of vaccines, in general.

Why are adjuvants added to some vaccines? ›

Adjuvants are used to enhance the immune response to a vaccine. They include various aluminium salts such as aluminium hydroxide, aluminium phosphate and potassium aluminium sulphate (alum).

What are the examples of vaccine adjuvants? ›

Aluminum adjuvants, MF59, AS01, AS03, AS04, and CpG ODN 1018 are classical human vaccine adjuvants. They have been widely approved for use in a wide variety of vaccines and serve to increase vaccine antibody titers and enhance cellular immune responses.

Are there adjuvants in the COVID vaccine? ›

Most of these vaccines contain inactivated virus or spike protein mRNA that are primary responsible for inducing innate and adaptive immunity. These vaccines were also formulated to contain supplementary adjuvants that are beneficial in boosting the immune response.

What is an adjuvant Quizlet? ›

An adjuvant is a substance or mixture of substances added to a vaccine to enhance the immune response to the vaccine.

How do adjuvants affect vaccines? ›

Available evidence suggests that adjuvants employ one or more of the following mechanisms to elicit immune responses: (1) sustained release of antigen at the site of injection (depot effect), (2) up-regulation of cytokines and chemokines, (3) cellular recruitment at the site of injection, (4) increase antigen uptake ...

What are the advantages of vaccine adjuvants? ›

Adjuvants have been used safely in vaccines for decades.

Newer adjuvants have been developed to target specific components of the body's immune response, so that protection against disease is stronger and lasts longer.

Why is using an adjuvant in a vaccine preparation advantageous? ›

It is documented that TLRs are expressed on APCs, including macrophages, DCs, and B cells. Therefore, the main purpose of using a TLR agonist in vaccine preparation as an adjuvant is to stimulate these cells to impart a robust immune response, linking innate and adaptive immunity (149).

Which flu vaccine has no adjuvants? ›

It is of note that Flublok – the only licensed recombinant influenza vaccine –does not contain an adjuvant, but it does contain three times as much of each haemagglutinin (45 μg) as Aggripal (15 μg) which is the Seqirus (formerly CSL/Novartis) unadjuvanted egg-derived inactivated virus influenza vaccine.

Which of the following is the most commonly used adjuvant in vaccines? ›

Aluminum-containing adjuvants are commonly used in human vaccines, but other adjuvants such as oil-in-water emulsions have recently been introduced for a few licensed vaccines.

What adjuvants are in the RSV vaccine? ›

Types and composition of RSV vaccines

GSK Arexvy consists of a recombinant RSV F protein antigen (based on the RSV-A subtype), stabilized in the prefusion conformation (preF), and AS01E adjuvant. The AS01 adjuvant system is the same used in GSK's recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV, Shingrix), but at a lower dose.

What are the disadvantages of the COVID-19 vaccine? ›

What are the side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine?
  • Soreness at the injection site.
  • Fatigue.
  • Headache.
  • Body aches.
  • Fever.
Nov 22, 2023

What happened to the Novavax vaccine? ›

The previous Novavax vaccine is no longer authorized in the U.S.

What is an example of adjuvant in vaccines? ›

Aluminum salts, monophosphoryl A (a detoxified bacterial component), QS21 (isolated from the bark of Quillaja Saponaria trees), CpG (nucleic acids), and squalene (a compound of the body's normal cholesterol synthesis pathway) are used as adjuvants in the United States.

What is the difference between a vaccine and an adjuvant? ›

An adjuvant is an ingredient of some vaccines that helps promote a better immune response. Adjuvants also can reduce the amount of virus needed for production of a vaccine, which can allow for greater supplies of vaccine to be manufactured.

What is considered an adjuvant? ›

Adjuvant Medications

This group includes drugs such as antidepressants, anticonvulsants, corticosteroids, neuroleptics, and other drugs with narrower adjuvant functions. Adjuvant drugs can be used to enhance the effects of pain medications, treat concurrent symptoms, and provide analgesia for other types of pain.

What vaccines need adjuvants? ›

Aluminum adjuvants are used in vaccines such as hepatitis A, hepatitis B, diphtheria-tetanus-containing vaccines, Haemophilus influenzae type b, and pneumococcal vaccines, but they are not used in the live, viral vaccines, such as measles, mumps, rubella, varicella and rotavirus.

What are adjuvants for medical purposes? ›

An ingredient in a medicine that increases or modifies the activity of the other ingredients. Adjuvants are often included in vaccines to enhance the body's immune response.

How adjuvants improve the effectiveness of some vaccines? ›

Adjuvants have been widely used in vaccines to promote the success of vaccination. Adjuvants enhance the adaptive immunity of vaccines by activating innate immune cells.

References

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