Report to the VRBPAC on the Site Visit for the Laboratory of DNA Viruses Keith Peden, PhD Chief,...
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Report to the VRBPAC on the Site Visit for theLaboratory of DNA Viruses
Keith Peden, PhD
Chief, Laboratory of DNA Viruses
May 8, 2013
1
Organization of the Laboratory of DNA Viruses
Laboratory of DNA VirusesChief: Keith Peden, PhD
Unit on Viral Latency– Phil Krause, PI
o Shuang Tango Amita Patelo Ana Sierra-Honigmanno Shasta McClenahano Nini Guoo Marta Bosch-Marce
Unit on Viral Gene Expression– Jerry Weir, PI
o Falko Schmeissero Clement Mesedao Alonzo Garciao Amy Woernero Arunima Kumaro Ollie Williamso Jordan Kuhno Anupama Vasudevan
Unit on Adventitious Agents and Cell Substrates– Andrew Lewis, PI
o Haruhiko Muratao Belete Teferedegneo Gideon Foseho Juliete Macauley
Unit of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics– Keith Peden, PI
o Romelda Omeiro Li Sheng-Fowlero Wei Tuo Kathryn Phyo Xiaohong Dengo Nozomi Sakakibarao Marilyn Lundquist
2
Changes in LDNAV Since Last Site Visit in 2008
One Principal Investigator (Mike Merchlinsky) left in late 2008
Andrew Lewis stepped down as Chief of LDNAV but retains his position as Principal Investigator
Keith Peden transferred to LDNAV in 2010 and was appointed Chief in 2011
Dr Jerry Weir continues to be a Principal Investigator in LDNAV with his other duties as Director of DVP and Acting Chief of the Laboratory of Pediatric Respiratory Viral Diseases
Dr Phil Krause continues to be a Principal Investigator in LDNAV as well as being Acting Deputy Director of the Office of Vaccines Research and Review
3
Examples of How LDNAV Research Program Supports the Public Health Mission of FDA (1)
Research programs of each PI give them and their staff the expertise to provide expert and informed guidance to industry on all aspects of vaccine development and manufacturing
Helping to resolve the inevitable vaccine health crises that arise; the most recent was the finding in 2010 by an academic laboratory that a porcine circovirus contaminated a rotavirus vaccine; because of the talented scientists in his group, Dr Krause was able to provide data to the VRBPAC that convinced them that there were no safety concerns raised by the finding
Developing reagents and assays to assist sponsors in pandemic preparedness for potential pandemic influenza, such as those caused by H5N1, H1N1, or H7N9(Jerry Weir) 4
Examples of How LDNAV Research Program Supports the Public Health Mission of FDA (2)
Addressing issues associated with vaccine/cell-substrate safety (Andrew Lewis), e.g., - Assessing whether quantitative tumorigenicity assays can assist in cell-
substrate characterization
- Identify whether microRNA profiling of cell substrates can be used as a surrogate for tumorigenicity assays
Addressing issues associated with vaccine/cell-substrate safety (Keith Peden), e.g., - Addressing issues associated with residual cell-substrate DNA in
vaccines
- Determining whether understanding the mechanism of tumorigenesis assists in estimating risks associated with using such cells for vaccine manufacture
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Summary of Research Programs of the Principal Investigators
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Jerry P Weir, PhDSenior Investigator
Unit on Viral Gene Expression
Research ProgramUnit on Viral Gene Expression
Goal of the research effort is to facilitate the development and licensure of vaccines for high-priority viral diseases by addressing issues important for product evaluation Facilitate the development and evaluation of
new-generation smallpox vaccines Facilitate the development and evaluation of
pandemic influenza vaccines
Evaluation of New-Generation Smallpox Vaccines
Research was a long-standing collaborative effort with Mike Merchlinsky (left CBER late 2008)
Current smallpox vaccines have certain side effects, some of which can be serious; therefore, new vaccines are being developed
Current and future focus of research efforts include:- Comparative immunogenicity of new-generation
smallpox vaccines (e.g., MVA, LC16m8) with the licensed smallpox vaccine
- Identification of biomarkers for vaccine effectiveness- Development of assays for product characterization
and pre-clinical/clinical efficacy evaluation
Development of Improved Neutralization Assays for Smallpox Vaccines Virus
Traditional plaque reduction neutralization test (PRNT)- Used in efficacy evaluation of ACAM2000- Laborious and time consuming - Require large quantities of sera- A single standardized assay cannot be used to assay candidate new-
generation smallpox vaccines (e.g., MVA, LC16m8)- Virus used for neutralization has effect on measured neutralization titers
Alternative neutralization methods (e.g., viruses expressing marker genes)- High throughput- Assay restricted to strain used to construct recombinant
Development of a rapid neutralization assay, miniaturized to reduce sample requirements, and capable of measuring neutralization of multiple viruses under identical conditions (qPCR-based microneutralization assay)
Development and Evaluation of Pandemic Influenza Vaccines
Pandemic influenza preparedness is an extremely high public-health priority
Support from supplemental Pandemic Influenza (HHS/FDA) and directly through the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)
Current and future focus of research efforts include:- Develop alternative approaches and improved methods to
expedite the production and calibration of influenza vaccine reagents
- Develop and evaluate new methods for potency determination of influenza vaccines
- Develop research tools to better understand the nature of protective immunity to pandemic influenza
New Methods for Potency Determination
Various techniques being explored as alternatives to SRID; goals are to:- Overcome some limitations of existing assay (e.g., sensitivity)- Allow a more rapid pandemic influenza response
Multiple criteria must be met for replacement assay- Accuracy and precision equal to or greater than current SRID- Dynamic range of assay needs to be equal to or greater than
current SRID- Potency measured should correlate with current SRID results
- Alternatively, correlate directly with clinical benefit- Capable of measuring potency of vaccine strain subtypes in a
trivalent (multivalent) vaccine- Stability indicating (i.e., capable of quantifying sub-potent
vaccines)- Transferability and practical
Unit on Viral Latency
Philip Krause, MDSenior Investigator
The detection of latent or persistent viral infections- Important for cell substrates/adventitious-agent issues- Important for understanding disease pathogenesis
Determination of strategies viruses use to become latent and subsequently reactivate to understand how this affects disease caused by viruses- Important for understanding what vaccines must
accomplish- Important for better understanding of live-attenuated
vaccines that can establish latency- Important for understanding latency in the context of cell
substrates
Research is Divided into Two Sections
Non-Specific Virus Detection
Nucleic acid extraction- Optional capsid or particle enrichment
Non-specific PCR- Krause lab. have used degenerate
oligonucleotide-PCR (DOP-PCR) for most of their experiments
Sequencing- Massively parallel sequencing is most powerful
- Algorithms have been established in the group to analyze the data
Capsid enrichment improves sensitivity of virus detection
Caveats:- does not remove all cell nucleic acid- adds variability- may concentrate ribosomes and ribosome-
associated RNAs Viruses from many classes and families have been
detected by the DOP-PCR method: DNA viruses, RNA viruses
Sample Preparation
mRNA Display: to Identify Epitopes
A powerful method for mapping linear peptide sequences bound by antibody- ≥ 3 logs more powerful than phage display
Potential utility in:- Diagnosis of infections- Understanding immune responses- Characterization of monoclonal antibodies- Identifying immunogens
This builds on our experience with MPS and analysis of MPS data
HSV Latency and Recurrence
HSV preferentially establishes latency in certain neuronal subtypes
Latency occurs when lytic genes are inhibited
Virus replication (and likely spread) and reactivation occur when lytic genes are expressed
The outcome of infection in any given neuron represents a contest between forces that promote replication and those that promote latency
Found that LAT is involved with establishing and maintaining the latent state
LAT encodes microRNAs, which appear to be involved with latency
Keith Peden, PhDSenior Investigator
Unit of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics
19
Unit of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics:Overall Research Objectives
Identify the potential risk factors associated with the use of novel cell substrates, particularly tumorigenic cells or cells derived from human tumors
Develop quantitative assays to measure the risk factors
Determine whether the risk factors can be mitigated
(testing, removal during manufacture, etc.)
Sustained collaboration with Andrew Lewis
20
Unit of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics:Current Projects
Project 1: Development of animal models to assess the oncogenicity of cell-substrate DNALi Sheng-Fowler, Wei Tu, Kathryn Phy, Xiaohong Deng, Haru Murata, Gideon Foseh, Juliete Macauley, Andrew Lewis
Project 2: Development of in vitro assays to quantify the degree of reduction of the biological activity of DNALi Sheng-Fowler, Andrew Lewis
Project 3: Determination of whether identifying the mechanism of neoplastic transformation can assist in estimating the risk of using such cells for vaccine manufacture (genetic, epigenetic)Romelda Omeir, Nozomi Sakakibara, Wei Tu, Xiaohong Deng, Belete Teferedegne, Andrew Lewis 21
General Approach to Evaluate Risks:The Defined-Risks Approach
Andrew Lewis, Phil Krause, Keith Peden
Identify the risk factors
Develop quantitative assays to measure the risk events
Generate data to determine the probability of a risk event occurring
Use these quantitative assays to determine ways these risk factors can be reduced and to quantify by how much
22
Does Residual Cell-Substrate DNA in Vaccines Represent a Risk?
Whether DNA from the cell substrate poses a risk to vaccine recipients has been debated for ~50 years
Biological activities of DNA:
- Infectious activity
- Oncogenic activity
23
Outcomes of Research on DNA
In vivo assays have been developed that can detect the oncogenic activity of cellular oncogenes
Several rodents have been identified that can detect the oncogenic activity of our ras/myc plasmid at below 1 ng (newborns of CD3 epsilon, SCID, and p53 mice, and newborn rats)
These results have been used by DVP to estimate risks from residual DNA and to develop recommendations to sponsors for amounts and size of DNA
Reservations with DNA oncogenicity studies- Unlikely to detect the oncogenic activity of an activated dominant
oncogene in cellular DNA due to the dilution- Even if this is possible, only a subset of dominant oncogenes score
positive in these assays- Best approach might be to limit the amount and size of the residual DNA
in vaccines 24
Unit of Adventitious Agent and Cell Substrate
Andrew M. Lewis Jr., MDSenior Investigator
25
Major Questions Addressed by Tumorigenicity Research
Can quantitative tumorigenicity assays assist in identifying risks from cell substrates?
What are the mechanisms of spontaneous transformation?
Are there risks from the use of immortalized cells for vaccine manufacture?
How do immortalized cells evolve to become tumorigenic?
Does this represent a risk?
26
Project 1: Understanding the evolution of non-tumorigenic to tumorigenic VERO cells
VERO cells are the most widely used cell substrate for vaccine manufacture
VERO cells can evolve from a non-tumorigenic to a tumorigenic phenotype by passage in culture
VRBPAC in 2000 suggested that DVP undertake a research program to determine whether the capacity to become tumorigenic represented a risk factor, i.e., understand the mechanism of neoplastic transformation in VERO cells
Determine whether microRNAs are involved in the neoplastic process– Document the expression patterns in non-tumorigenic and
tumorigenic VERO cells– Identify miRNAs whose expression correlates with the acquisition
of a tumorigenic phenotype– Determine whether such miRNAs can be used as biomarkers for a
tumorigenic phenotype in VERO cells 27
MDCK cells are widely used in influenza virus research and have been used for manufacture of an inactivated influenza vaccine (licensed in late 2012)
Because of the unusual properties of MDCK cells (tumorigenicity, induction of failure-to-thrive), MDCK cells have raised safety concerns– Determine the cause of the aberrant dose-response
relationship of certain MDCK cell lines
– Determine the biological basis for failure-to-thrive
– Determine the mechanism of transformation of MDCK cells
28
Project 2: Characterization of the tumorigenic phenotype of Madin-Darby (MDCK) cells and developing new lines of canine kidney cells
Outcomes of Research on MDCK Cells
The tumorigenic phenotype of MDCK cells is complex
Understanding the pathophysiology of the FTT syndrome and processes involved in development of subpopulations capable of forming different tumor types should contribute to management of MDCK cells as reagents for vaccine development
Understanding the processes of neoplastic transformation of MDCK cells is complicated by the lack of earlier passages
New lines of dog kidney cells have been established to study the transformation processes in canine kidney cells: passages are available from primary kidney cells, to immortalized cells, to tumorigenic cells
Results indicate that there are similarities with these cells and MDCK cells 29
Based on earlier work on establishing a neutralization assay for SV40 using a qPCR endpoint
Adapted the assay to RNA viruses using a qRT-PCR endpoint – Influenza virus qRT-PCR-based microneutralization assay just
published in PLOS One
– Respiratory syncytial virus qRT-PCR-based microneutralization assay just submitted for publication (collaboration with Judy Beeler)
– Current work is directed at establishing analogous assay for human metapneumovirus
– These types of assays are adaptable to high throughput and robotics, since no nucleic acid extraction step is required
30
Project 3: Development of neutralization assays for viruses of regulatory interest
Laboratory of DNA Viruses
Thank You for Your Attention
31