Abstract

A variety of Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) compliant processes have been reported for production of non-replicating adenovirus vectors, but important challenges remain. Most clinical development of adenovirus vectors now uses simian adenoviruses or rare human serotypes, whereas reported manufacturing processes mainly use serotypes such as AdHu5 which are of questionable relevance for clinical vaccine development. Many clinically relevant vaccine transgenes interfere with adenovirus replication, whereas most reported process development uses selected antigens or even model transgenes such as fluorescent proteins which cause little such interference. Processes are typically developed for a single adenovirus serotype – transgene combination, requiring extensive further optimization for each new vaccine.There is a need for rapid production platforms for small GMP batches of non-replicating adenovirus vectors for early-phase vaccine trials, particularly in preparation for response to emerging pathogen outbreaks. Such platforms must be robust to variation in the transgene, and ideally also capable of producing adenoviruses of more than one serotype. It is also highly desirable for such processes to be readily implemented in new facilities using commercially available single-use materials, avoiding the need for development of bespoke tools or cleaning validation, and for them to be readily scalable for later-stage studies.Here we report the development of such a process, using single-use stirred-tank bioreactors, a transgene-repressing HEK293 cell – promoter combination, and fully single-use filtration and ion exchange components. We demonstrate applicability of the process to candidate vaccines against rabies, malaria and Rift Valley fever, each based on a different adenovirus serotype. We compare performance of a range of commercially available ion exchange media, including what we believe to be the first published use of a novel media for adenovirus purification (NatriFlo® HD-Q, Merck). We demonstrate the need for minimal process individualization for each vaccine, and that the product fulfils regulatory quality expectations. Cell-specific yields are at the upper end of those previously reported in the literature, and volumetric yields are in the range 1 × 1013 – 5 × 1013 purified virus particles per litre of culture, such that a 2–4 L process is comfortably adequate to produce vaccine for early-phase trials. The process is readily transferable to any GMP facility with the capability for mammalian cell culture and aseptic filling of sterile products.

Highlights

  • Development of novel vaccines has been a painstaking process taking many years and involving the development of entirely bespoke manufacturing processes

  • We selected vectors encoding a variety of transgenes: ‘ChAdOx1 RVF’ encoding the GnGc antigen of Rift Valley fever virus (RVF) [24]; ‘ChAdOx2 RabG’ encoding rabies virus glycoprotein [22], and ‘ChAd63 ME-TRAP’ encoding a previously described malaria antigen [23]

  • We focused upon developing a process which could be rapidly adapted to any adenovirus serotype/transgene combination to produce a small Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) batch suitable for early-phase clinical trials

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Summary

Introduction

Development of novel vaccines has been a painstaking process taking many years and involving the development of entirely bespoke manufacturing processes. This approach is incapable of delivering a rapid response to emerging pathogens. In contrast ‘platform technologies’ for subunit vaccines allow the application of a single vaccine production method to the induction of immune responses against any protein antigen of interest. A key group of such ‘platforms’ are viral vector vaccines, which use a replication-deficient virus to deliver a transgene encoding the antigen of interest for expression in the recipient’s cells. Manufacture of such vectors should be similar regardless of the encoded antigen

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