Team Working On Superbug Vaccine
A team of scientists is harnessing mRNA vaccine technology developed for Covid-19 to conquer a common superbug.
The day after Ries
Langley’s son turned one, his knee swelled up, turning
hot and red. He couldn’t put any weight on his leg and he
cried constantly. It was the start of a horrible month in
hospital. The little boy had osteomyelitis, a bone infection
caused in his case by Staphylococcus aureus, commonly
known as S. aureus, Staph aureus or just
“staph”.
Langley, a senior research fellow in
Molecular Medicine and Pathology at the University of
Auckland, had already spent years studying staph. He still
felt as helpless as any father watching his son suffer. The
experience cemented his determination to understand the
tricky bacterium better.
Today, Langley’s son is
fourteen and healthy, but his father’s resolve has only
strengthened. As co-principal investigator of a team led by
his longtime mentor, Professor John
Fraser, Langley is working on a project to develop an
mRNA vaccine for staph. The project is funded by Wellcome Leap, within
the R3: RNA Readiness and
Response programme, which has put the Auckland team in
touch with a global consortium of teams working on various
dimensions of mRNA technology.
“A successful vaccine
could keep people out of hospital, shorten their time in
hospital or potentially save their lives,” says Senior
Research Fellow Fiona
Radcliff, the project’s other co-principal
investigator. “That’s what gets me out of bed in the
morning.”
A foe with many faces
Under a
microscope, staph doesn’t look like much – just little
round blobs. In a sense, though, it has many faces.
Staph
is commonly carried on people’s skin and in their
nostrils. Most of the time it doesn’t cause any symptoms.
Sometimes it can cause minor skin infections or food
poisoning. It can also be deadly. It’s the most common
cause of hospital-acquired, surgical, and medical implant
infections. It can also cause bloodstream infections, bone
and joint infections, toxic shock, pneumonia and infective
endocarditis, a life-threatening heart infection.
To make
matters worse, staph can rapidly develop resistance to most
antibiotics. It’s good at sharing bits of genetic
information – meaning genes that carry antibiotic
resistance are easily transferred between strains of
bacteria. This ability is a major reason why staph is listed
in the World Health Organization’s list of priority
pathogens.
Around the world, the commonest form of
antibiotic resistance is Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a “superbug”
that’s highly resistant to commonly used
antibiotics.
In the United States, hospital-acquired MRSA
bloodstream infections caused 20,000 deaths in 2017 alone
and healthcare costs associated with staph are estimated to
be US$15 billion a year, says Langley.
Nor are things
better in New Zealand.
“We have some the highest rates
of staphylococcal infection in the developed world. It’s
particularly prevalent in Māori and Pacific populations,”
says Langley. “This makes it a health equity
issue.”
Knowing the enemy
Fraser, Radcliff
and Langley know staph better than just about any other team
in the world. Fraser, who is dean of the Faculty of Medical
and Health Sciences, started working on the bacterium some
30 years ago when he was part of a team that made the major
discovery of a set of proteins called superantigens that
were unique to staphylococcus and streptococcus
bacteria.
Langley did his PhD under Fraser and returned
to the same lab after a postdoctoral fellowship in the
United States. He has been publishing research on staph for
20 years.
Radcliff came to the field through a more
circuitous route but has been familiar with staph since her
days growing up on a dairy farm in Tasmania. Staph is the
most common cause of mastitis – udder infections – in
dairy cows. It’s a major economic issue for farmers
because an infection can lead to a whole tanker load of milk
being thrown out, says Radcliff, who has worked in
Fraser’s lab for 15 years and has a background researching
both bacteria and vaccines.
This deep knowledge is part
of why Fraser believes he and his team can do better than
previous teams have in producing a vaccine against
staph.
“Why a vaccine? Simple answer is, we’re
running out of antibiotics,” says Fraser. “Vaccines have
been tried for staph before, taking a relatively simple
approach – generating antibodies to surface molecules and
hoping those antibodies kill the bacteria. They’ve all
failed, some spectacularly, because they were based on the
assumption that what we need to do is sterilise the body
from staph. It’s such a common bacterium and it hides in
so many places in the body, we don’t think that’s
possible.”
A new type of vaccine
The other
reason Fraser and his team believe they’ll be able to
produce a breakthrough staph vaccine is because vaccine
technology has improved.
As the Covid-19 pandemic upended
the world, enormous resources were poured into vaccine
research. Covid vaccines were produced with unprecedented
speed. The safest and most effective were a new type of
vaccine – mRNA vaccines.
Traditional vaccines use
inactivated virus or virus particles to teach the body’s
immune cells to recognise them and thus mount a speedier
defence when active virus invades the body. mRNA vaccines
work differently. They use bits of messenger RNA that can
enter cells and teach them to create just one part of the
virus – in the case of Covid, the characteristic spike
protein. The body’s immune system thus learns to recognise
and attack these spike proteins without having been exposed
to the virus itself.
While the Covid vaccines really were
developed quickly, research into mRNA vaccines had been
going on for decades.
“The Covid vaccines have been a
vindication of what people have been saying about mRNA for a
long time,” says Fraser. “There’s huge potential for
this technology.”
The challenges of a staph vaccine
Making an mRNA vaccine for staph is trickier
than making one for the coronavirus that causes Covid-19.
The SARS-CoV-2 virus makes few proteins and has an obvious
target for a vaccine – the spike protein that initiates
binding to host cells.
Staph, being a bacterium rather
than a tiny virus, consists of thousands of proteins.
However, Fraser and his team are familiar with its virulence
factors – the molecular characteristics that help it
attack a host and evade its defence mechanisms. They chose
three of these virulence factors to target at once in a
single mRNA vaccine. Results in animal studies have been
promising.
“We have shown that if we infect vaccinated
mice with S. aureus, these animals recover more
rapidly and have a substantially reduced burden of bacteria
in major organs such as their livers and spleens than our
unvaccinated control mice,” says Radcliff, who leads the
animal model part of the research.
A staph-vaccinated future?
There’s still a lot of science to do. While
the team has shown that its vaccine stimulates a robust
neutralising antibody response in mice, it’s still working
to understand which immune cell populations contribute most
to the protective immunity seen in the animals. More work
also needs to go into ensuring safety before humans can be
inoculated.
Without the massive resources poured into
Covid-19 vaccines, things won’t go as fast. Still, the
team believes its vaccine will be ready for human clinical
trials within a few years. Clinical trials will take longer
than the Covid vaccine trials did because S. aureus
doesn’t infect people at anywhere near the rate of a major
Covid wave, so results won’t come in as fast.
The team
does, however, have every intention of seeing its vaccine
through. It will be able to take advantage of the linkages
formed through the Wellcome Leap R3 programme, including
with groups working on producing clinical-grade mRNA and
groups researching ways to produce vaccines and other
products on a smaller and less expensive scale. It’s
already talking to potential industry partners in New
Zealand.
“This will be the world’s first
antibacterial mRNA vaccine if successful,” says Kerryn
Kilkenny, the UniServices business development manager
(health) who’s been working with the team. “That would
be huge for New Zealand. It would put us at the forefront of
vaccine technology globally.”
The staph vaccine will
probably never be one that requires a near-universal
rollout. Most healthy people can co-exist with S.
aureus without problems. A vaccine, however, might be
effective when used to build up immunity before major
surgery, or in particularly vulnerable populations such as
dialysis patients or residents of aged care homes, says
Fraser.
“A successful vaccine would reduce healthcare
costs, because the longer you spend in hospital, the more
expenses are incurred,” says Radcliff. “Not to mention
the negative effect on people’s lives if you have to fight
off a massive staph infection. In the end, the goal is
improving and saving
lives.”