Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Fighting Flu with Fungus Neugenesis hopes an orange mold will produce a bird flu vaccine. April 10, 2006 Print Issue http://www.redherring.com/article.aspx?a=16390 A powdery orange mold first known for its 1843 infestation of French bakeries has a special place in genetics. Neurospora crassa was used to demonstrate that enzyme-mediated steps in biological pathways are under genetic control. In other words, it showed the relationship between genes and proteins, and brought geneticists and biochemists into the same labs. Neugenesis is a company focused on this mold and CEO W. Dorsey Stuart believes he can use it to solve one of the world's major impending problems: bird flu. Travelers landing and taking off at San Francisco airport fly a couple of hundred yards over Burlingame, California-based Neugenesis' small lab containing orange fluff-filled flasks. The company was formed in Hawaii in 1992 in order to fulfill the conditions of a state research grant issued when Mr. Stuart was assistant professor of genetics and molecular biology at the University of Hawaii. It has steadily improved its fungal strains since, and is developing them to produce antibodies with an unusual degree of variation in their structures. With Neurospora's genome sequence published in 2003—and having collaborated with Danish biotech company Novozymes to produce antibodies since 2002—Mr. Stuart and his team are now investing their energy and Band of Angels funding into making vaccines. Theoretically, fungi would make fantastic vaccine factories. They have simple and cheap habits. They absorb the nutrition they need through a cell wall and, if properly tweaked, secrete proteins such as human antibodies and vaccines back out. Mr. Stuart says they have an added benefit: The carbohydrates stuck on these secreted human proteins are more similar to human ones than the carbohydrates created in chicken eggs, the current standard method of vaccine production. But Neurospora's most relevant characteristic is that its cells happily fuse with one another to accommodate multiple, different nuclei. Neugenesis intends to use the latter attribute as a way of assembling the parts of a flu vaccine. By developing various recombinant strains of Neurospora, each for a different strain (and some for potential new versions of the virus that do not yet exist in nature), Neugenesis plans to produce a bank of would-be vaccine ingredients. The company can then create whatever combination of viral antigens is needed by fusing the cells of different fungal strains together so that they secrete vaccine ingredients custom- made to the type of viral threat. Chasing the Flu The influenza virus changes so quickly that the most important strains are often different from one flu season to the next. This means the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta has to best guess the identity of the next viral wave many months in advance in order for egg-based vaccine manufacturers to finish production in time. Partly inspired by the well-publicized manufacturing woes of Chiron, Mr. Stuart filed a patent for his fungal vaccine production method in October 2004. It is quicker, too. " Within a month you'll have your vaccine ready for production—instead of nine months—no chickens, no eggs, " he says. The reduced time lag would also allow for redesigning and manufacturing a new flu vaccine in the middle of the season, according to whichever strains take hold. In the last quarter, Neugenesis has turned its fungi to producing an antigen to hemagglutanin 5, the H5 part of the H5N1 flu virus—and most important component of a vaccine against it. CSO Cambareri has also altered the fungus so that it deposits the antigen in its orange spores rather than secretes it into solution, opening up the possibility that a vaccine could be eaten, by birds and humans, instead of injected. This could be a solution for vaccinating large numbers of people in developing countries where refrigerators are few and far between, since several communities would deliberately grow the fungus on a soy press-cake to make it a more palatable foodstuff. To be sure, Neugenesis' technology is still early stage, and oral vaccines—particularly those that do not contain live versions of a virus—tend not to survive the acidity and enzyme activity of the stomach. There are tricks to deal with this problem, however, such as encapsulating the vaccine in a tiny, fatty bubble called a liposome. But Neugenesis is still at the stage of signing with a collaborator to run animal trials, most likely in China. Despite the challenges, it appears the VC community is eager to back companies developing products to counter pandemics. Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers recently announced a $200-million fund designed to accelerate innovations for what it called " worldwide pandemic preparedness. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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