Review Article
Current
pandemic COVID-19 vaccine strategies and development: a comprehensive review
Estrategias
y desarrollo actuales de la vacuna contra la pandemia de COVID-19: una revisión
exhaustiva
Hayat Ullah1,2 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9463-8528
Abdur Raziq2 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2779-3269
Anbareen Gul3 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3427-8038
Asad Ullah4 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0364-8430
Javaria Saeed5 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5657-1097
Navid Iqbal6 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6429-1829
Imrana Niaz Sultan7,8 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4891-7881
Afrasiab Khan Tareen7,8 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5761-4044
Saadat Hussain9 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1406-4219
Muhammad Waseem Khan7,10* ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3304-9735
1School of
Biotechnology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi, China.
2Department of
Bioinformatics and Biotechnology, Faculty of Life
Science, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan.
3Department of
Biotechnology, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan.
4Department of
Microbiology, Faculty of Life Sciences and Informatics, Balochistan University
of Information Technology Engineering and Management Sciences, Quetta,
Pakistan.
5Institute of
Industrial Biotechnology, Government College University Lahore, Pakistan.
6Institute of
Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering, The University of Agriculture Peshawar,
Pakistan.
7Department of
Biotechnology, Faculty of Life Sciences and Informatics, Balochistan University
of Information Technology Engineering and Management Sciences, Quetta,
Pakistan.
8Department of Biotechnology,
Kasetsart University, Chatuchak, Bangkok, 10900, Thailand.
9Department of
Life Sciences, Faculty of Genomics and Bioinformatics. Aix Marseille
University, Marseille, France.
10Department
of Environmental and Biological Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, 70200,
Kuopio, Finland.
Corresponding
author: waseem.khan@uef.fi.
ABSTRACT
The coronavirus disease-19 pandemic
with the characteristics of asymptomatic condition, long incubation period and
poor treatment has influenced the entire globe. Coronaviruses are important
emergent pathogens, specifically, the recently emerged sever acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2, the causative virus of the current COVID-19 pandemic.
To mitigate the virus and curtail the infection risk, vaccines are the most
hopeful solution. The protein structure and genome sequence of SARS-CoV-2 were
processed and provided in record time; providing feasibility to the development
of COVID-19 vaccines. In an unprecedented scientific and technological effort,
vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 have been developed in less than one year. This
review addresses the approaches adopted for SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development and
the effectiveness of the currently approved vaccines.
Keywords: coronavirus; COVID-19; pandemics; SARS-CoV-2, vaccines; viruses.
RESUMEN
La pandemia de COVID-19, con sus características de
condición asintomática, largo periodo de incubación y escaso tratamiento, ha
tenido un impacto global. Los coronavirus son importantes patógenos emergentes,
específicamente, el coronavirus del síndrome respiratorio agudo severo 2
descubierto recientemente, virus causal de la actual pandemia de COVID-19. Para
mitigar el virus y reducir el riesgo de infección, las vacunas son la solución
más esperanzadora. La estructura de la proteína y la secuencia del genoma del
SARS-CoV-2 se procesaron y proporcionaron en un tiempo récord, lo que ha
permitido el desarrollo de las vacunas contra el COVID-19. En un esfuerzo
científico y tecnológico sin precedentes, se han desarrollado vacunas contra el
SARS-CoV-2 en menos de un año. Esta revisión aborda los enfoques adoptados para
el desarrollo de la vacuna contra el SARS-CoV-2 y la eficacia de las vacunas
actualmente aprobadas.
Palabras clave:
coronavirus; COVID-19; pandemias; SARS-CoV-2;
vacunas; virus.
Recibido: 9 de mayo de 2022
Aceptado: 7 de noviembre de 2022
Introduction
The current pandemic
Coronavirus Disease-19 (COVID-19) is caused by the sever acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which belongs to the Coronaviridae family and the Betacoronavirus
genus that affects human beings.(1)
SARS-CoV-2 infection originated in Wuhan, China in late December 2019. Since
then, the virus has infected millions of people worldwide.(2) As of November 10, 2022, confirmed
cases of COVID-19 were 630,601,291 and 6,583,588 related deaths were reported
throughout the world. Also, a total of 12,885,748,541 vaccine doses had been
administered.(3) Most vaccine doses have been administered in China
(3,452,957,751) followed by India (2,170,901,372) (Table 1). SARS-CoV-2 induces
respiratory system complications; symptoms include fever, myalgia, cough, and
fatigue. Researchers reported the viral genetic and protein sequence in time
and strategies have been established to mitigate the pandemic through the
development of effective drugs and vaccines.(4,5) Information about viral structure proteins, such as main
protease (Mpro), spike proteins (S protein) and RNA dependent RNA polymerase
(RdRp), would help to design drugs against SARS-CoV-2. Additionally, various
small molecular drugs and vaccine are being developed for treatment of
COVID-19.(6,7)
According to literature, in
1918, during influenza pandemic, the second phase of outbreak was more severe
than the first one. Scientists predicted the coronavirus outbreak a decade ago,
but the world was not prepared to handle the pandemic.(8)
SARS-CoV-2 has a long incubation period (range 2–14 days), easy and fast
transmission, high infection rates, and infected individuals may be
asymptomatic (at initial stage), all of which contribute to the severity of the
disease. In parallel with influenza, coronaviruses have the potential of being
a seasonal disease.(9,10)
Vaccine development
strategies and platforms
Table 1. Number of
vaccinated people in different countries and regions (Worldwide, top 10).
For COVID-19 vaccine development, scientists have done and are
doing many efforts. Most of the vaccine developing strategies have used the SARS-CoV-2 S protein as the target region.(11) These vaccines are undergoing trials for SARS-CoV-2. Each of these vaccines has their own benefits and drawbacks.(12) As of November 8, 2022, 199 vaccine candidates were
in preclinical phase, while 172 vaccines were reported to be in clinical
development.(13)
Viral vectored vaccines
Two broad
groups of viral vectors are being used for vaccine production:
replication-competent and replication-defective viral vectored vaccines. For replication-competent
vectors, a lower dose is required to produce a strong immune response, because
this vector multiplies resulting in enhanced antigen exposure.
Replication-defective vectors are administered in higher dosages as they do not
have self-propagation capability. This method is preferred for producing viral
vectored vaccines due to its safety. There are various replication-competent
and replication-defective COVID-19 candidate vaccines in clinical trials.(14) However,
only replication-defective counterparts could reach phase III clinical trials.
The viral-vector vaccine strategy is detailed in Figure 1a. Viral vector
vaccine using non-replicating adenoviral vectors is one of the main vaccine
candidates developed. These vectors are engineered with viral genes, especially
S protein gene.(4)
Viral vector vaccines efficiently transfer genes
to the target site and induce the immune response of cytotoxic T cells.(15) They express a high
level of antigenic proteins for longer duration which cause the removal of
virus from virus infected cells.(16) Though adenoviral vectors
have many advantages i.e., scalability, adjuvant qualities and tissue tropism,
there are also certain challenges, such as pre-existing immunity in humans that
may affect the efficiency of these vectors. Pre-existing immunity against
adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) has been reported in humans and, therefore, an
alternative adenoviral vector ChAdOx1 has been derived as a vaccine platform
with low level of antibodies and T cells in the blood serum.(17)
Protein subunit vaccines
Protein subunit vaccines that use recombinant antigenic proteins do not induce long-lasting immunity for coronaviruses.(18) Vaccines require an adjuvant as an
auxiliary support for vaccine-induced immune responses. The function of an
adjuvant is to increase the lifespan of the antigenic material or to enhance
the cytokine response of the immune system.(19) SARS-CoV-2 uses S protein, a transmembrane protein to fuse to the host cell and
enter through endocytosis (in certain cells). The S protein fuses with
transmembrane protein receptor angiotensin converting enzyme 2, which is
present on the surface of human lung tissues.(18) This S protein consists of two subunits: S1 and S2. S1 subunit consists of
N-terminal domain, receptor binding domain (RBD) and receptor binding motif,
while S2 consists of fusion peptide, heptad repeat 1 and heptad repeat 2.(20) S glycoproteins possess two conformational states; one is pre-fusion and
the other is post-fusion. The antigen used as a vaccine must maintain its
pre-fusion state for a good quality of the immune response. The protein subunit
strategy is detailed in Figure 1b.(21)
RNA vaccines
For COVID-19 vaccine, another emerging
platform is mRNA, which does not cause any insertional mutagenesis.(12) Presently, studies are being conducted on
two types of ribosomal nucleic acid (RNA) vaccines: one is replicating and the
second is non-replicating RNA vaccines. It is based on chimeric messenger
ribosomal nucleic acid (mRNAs) containing the open reading frame sequence of
the virus which is not integrated into the chromosome as it is directly
translated into the cytoplasm.(22) Once mRNA vaccine is injected, the mRNA is
processed by the immune cells and, after translation, the production of the target protein
activates the immune cells of the body to produce antibodies (neutralizing) to avoid virus
entry into cells. The RNA vaccine strategy is detailed in Figure 1c.(23)
Fig. 1. a) Replicating and non-replicating
viral vectore vaccine platform, b) Protein subunit
vaccine platform, c) Nucleic acid (DNA/RNA) vaccine platform, d) Live attenuated and inactivated vaccine strategy.
Source: (Callaway, 2020)24.
DNA vaccines
To produce enough copies of immunogenic viral
proteins, a genetic construct (codes for the specific antigen) is synthetized
in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and administered into the host body. DNA
vaccines use a plasmid DNA which contains elements such as the DNA sequence of
the antigen, the expression elements required for antigen expression in
eukaryotes, selectable markers for the selection of the vector containing the
gene of interest, followed by a purification process. The eukaryotic expression
cassette contains the gene of interest between 5′ promotor and 3′ polyadenine
tail that is required for DNA transport into the nucleus, for mRNA stability
and its translation inside the infected cell.(25) Before entering the nucleus, DNA vaccines must
cross two cellular membranes. Different administration methods are used for the
introduction of the DNA vector into the body, the most common routes are
intramuscular or intradermal injection. There are also other methods of
delivery such as gene gun, jet injection and in vivo electroporation, because
the previous method of delivery causes low immunogenic response.(26)
To induce the adaptive immune response, DNA vaccines are administered
along with an adjuvant. The antigenic material is first phagocytosed by
immature dendritic cells which, through major histocompatibility complex 1 (MHC
1) and MHC 2, present it to CD4+ and CD8+ T cells stimulating humoral and
cell-mediated immune responses. The DNA vaccine strategy is detailed in Figure 1c.(27)
Live attenuated vaccines
In live attenuated
vaccines, live pathogens are altered in some way making them less virulent or
attenuated before administered into the body. When administered, they provoke
the immune response. Its nasal administration is with the help of a nasal
spray. An influenza-based vaccine strain with a deletion in the non-structural
1 (NS1) gene, expresses the RBD domain of spike protein, which is present on
the surface of SARS-CoV-2. This vaccine is cultivated in chick embryo or Madin
Dfarby Canine Kidney (MDCK) cells. Its immunogenic potential is more than that
of wild-type influenza virus.(12)
Inactivated pathogen
vaccines
After the production of
attenuated cholera vaccine by Pasteur, Salmon and Smith, a new method of
vaccine development was introduced by inactivating the pathogen to be used as
vaccine to tackle the rare events caused by live attenuated vaccines. The
inactivation methods used were heat, chemical treatments (formalin,
β-propiolactone), gamma rays.(24, 28)
In inactivated vaccines, a dead form of the pathogen is used, thus confirming
the better safety profile compared to live attenuated vaccines. However,
sometimes heat, chemicals or radiation cause loss of immunogenicity of the
pathogen resulting in less effective form of immunization than attenuated
vaccine. Inactivated pathogen vaccines most often require the addition of
adjuvants or such compounds that stimulate or amplify immune cells. The
inactivated pathogen vaccine strategy is detailed in Figure 1d.(14)
SARS-CoV-2 vaccine trials
Since the
emergence of COVID-19, scientists around the world put their efforts on the
development of vaccines. Initial efforts started in China where the outbreak
was first reported.(12) As of
April 6, 2022, more than 196 vaccines were in preclinical and 153 in clinical
development, of which 44 vaccines could reach Phase III clinical trials and 10
vaccines, phase IV and are currently being administered to different age groups
in different parts of the world. Phase
IV clinical trial vaccines are Sinovac, Sinopharm + Beijing institute of
Biological Products, AstraZeneca + University of Oxford, CanSino Biologics+
Beijing institute of biological products, Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech.(13) These companies used different
vaccine platforms for SARS-CoV-2 vaccines. Sinovac and Sinopharm used
inactivated viral vector vaccines in which whole virus is killed; CanSino
Biologics, Gamaleya and AstraZeneca used adenovirus vectored platform based on
non-replicating or weakened common cold virus; Moderna and Pfizer used the mRNA
platform. This mRNA platform is the newest vaccine generation technique in
which the synthetic mRNA of antigen is administered into the body of the host
to produce the antigen.(12,
29) Novavax uses protein subunit vaccine in which virus particles
are used to stimulate the host immune system.(14) Mechanisms of these vaccine platforms are given in
Figure 1a, Figure 1b, Figure 1c, and Figure 1d. COVAX is a SARS-CoV-2 vaccines global
access facility, together with Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, Coalition for
Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and World Health Organization (WHO).
COVAX is a partnership between
different world organizations for the development, manufacture and impartial delivery
of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (30).
The SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development
progress is summarized in Table 2.
Table
2. Vaccine
candidates of SARS-CoV-2 and their status.(3)
Developer |
Vaccine |
Type |
Status |
Sinovac |
SARS-CoV-2 vaccine |
Inactivated vaccine |
Phase IV |
Sinopharm |
SARS-CoV-2
vaccine |
Inactivated
vaccine |
Phase IV |
AstraZeneca |
ChAdOx1 |
Viral vectored vaccine |
Phase IV |
CanSino biologics Inc. |
Ad5-nCoV |
Viral
vectored vaccine |
Phase IV |
Gamaleya research
institute |
Sputnik V |
Viral vectored vaccine |
Phase III |
Janssen (USA) |
JNJ-78436725 |
Viral
vectored vaccine |
Phase IV |
Novavax |
NVX-CoV2373 |
Protein sub-unit vaccine |
Phase III |
Moderna |
SARS-CoV-2 RNA vaccine |
RNA vaccine |
Phase IV |
Pfizer/BioNTech |
(BNT-162) |
RNA vaccine |
Phase IV |
Effectiveness
of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine
Effectiveness of SARS-CoV-2
vaccine is not simple, but very complex, as its efficacy is checked against
multiple parameters like deterrence of symptoms e.g., a person has acquired the
virus but will not advance the disease; secondly, preclusion of infection, the
efficacy of the vaccine to prevent virus transmission from one person to
another and thirdly, protection from severe disease, the efficacy of the
vaccine to protect the exposed person from serious disease that requires
hospitalization. For each of these parameters, the efficacy is checked after
the first and last doses of vaccination against different variants of
SARS-CoV-2 (Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta and Omicron) (Table 3).(31)
Table 3. Efficacy of
vaccine by different variants of coronavirus.(31)
Vaccine scalability and
manufacturing
Vaccine development
consists of three stages: antigen discovery which needs series of research,
small scale manufacturing of vaccine for clinical trials and after success in
full clinical trials, mass production of vaccine in larger scale for worldwide
distribution.(32) In the
current situation, the concerns are not only SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development,
but also the supply and manufacturing the vaccine because of considering cost,
formulation, and scale-up manufacturing. The demand of the vaccine is high, so
in this situation, the developing countries are at a dis-advantageous position.
Therefore, platforms and technologies must be considered to minimize the cost
of manufacturing vaccine (Table 4).(8)
Most of the pharmaceutical industries use traditional methods like bioreactors
and cell cultures (bacterial, yeast and mammalian) to manufacture vaccine which
is highly expensive with high risk of microbial contamination. Therefore, novel methods for rapid vaccine development and
manufacturing are now needed. A new approach, plant molecular farming, can be
used for the large-scale production of vaccine as it offers scalability: each
of the plant acts as a reactor. The greater the number of plants grown, the
greater the number of products manufactured. Other characteristics of this
approach are low cost and inability of human pathogens to replicate in plant
cells.(33)
Table
4. Production
platforms features for vaccine development.
Production
platform |
Yields |
Advantages |
Disadvantages |
Mammalian Cells |
Moderate to
high |
High yield Established
regulatory approval Correct
post-translational modification |
High risks of
contamination Complex and
expensive in development and growth Difficult to
scale up |
Bacterial cells |
High yields
of simple
proteins |
Well
characterized production strains Cheap and
simple growth conditions Short
production time Established
regulatory approval Scalability
through fermentation |
No human
glycosylation Lack of post
translational modifications No post-translational
modification Large
proteins misfolding |
Yeasts |
High yields |
Short
production timescale Cheap and
simple growth, conditions Fermentation
scalability Proteins
correct folding |
Bacterial
contamination No human
glycosylation |
Molecular farming in plants |
Moderate to high |
Simple
scalability with more growth plants Maximum scale
up potential Low risks of
contamination |
Existing
regulatory pathway but technology is still very new No human
glycosylation |
Insect cells |
Moderate to high |
Incubation at
lower temperature No CO2
required for incubation Higher
expression levels when infected with recombinant baculovirus |
RNA
transcripts inactivation due to cryptic splice sites Expensive on
a large scale No human
glycosylation |
Vaccine delivery, distribution and administration
Challenges
of vaccine administration and delivery depends on the selection of vaccine
platform used. The best vaccine platform would have simple integration into
devices, designed to be supplied far and wide, manufactured at low cost and
administered with feasible supervision. Several vaccine formulations for
underdeveloped and developing countries require constant refrigeration; the
need for a cold chain hinders the distribution and application of vaccines
globally.(34) The largest
challenge for solution-based vaccines has been the dependence on cold
transport. According to WHO, 2.8 million vaccines were lost in five countries
due to cold chain failure, and less than 10% countries have effective vaccine
management practices. Lyophilized vaccines may be stored at room temperature,
but it is difficult to produce such lyophilized solutions.(8,35)
The most
favorable vaccine platform is nanotechnology, derived from bacteriophages and
plant viruses, which have evolved as stable nano-containers protecting the
genome under various environmental conditions, for example, Cowpea mosaic viruses,
that is stable at above 60°C in buffered solutions for about one hour and pH
(3.5-9.0) at room temperature.(36,37)
Furthermore, plant virus nanoparticles are stable under gastrointestinal
conditions and orally bioavailable, therefore opening the door for global
distribution and oral vaccination. In
edible leaf tissue, vaccines could be produced to make possible vaccination of
the human population and livestock. Since coronaviruses are zoonotic viruses
that can infect humans and animals, this will be good initiative to meet the
purpose of health initiative towards the unity of human and veterinary
medicines that will be more important to prevent from future outbreaks.(38,39)
In
developing countries, effective vaccination campaigns are required and also
access to health care professionals under anomalous circumstance, which is a
major challenge during the current global pandemic, where healthcare system
does not meet the recommended criteria of WHO.(40) Nowadays, suitable alternatives such as
film-based vaccines, single dose slow-release implants and micro-needle-based
patches are available to address vaccine distribution and their access
challenges that could overcome reliance on cold chain and make sure vaccination
where health care professionals are rare.(40) Microneedles-based patches can be self-administered; such modern
vaccine delivery would reduce the burden of healthcare professionals.
Melt-processed devices have the advantage of rapid manufacturing at large
scale, long term stability and cold chain independence. The potential to ease
the burden of medical system and break the cold chain by providing a safe and
self-administered prophylactic vaccine has been initialized by different
companies such as Zosano, Veleritas Inc., Debiotech and Corium International
has led to the filing of more than 10,000 patents globally.(41)
Conclusion
Since the
emergence of COVID-19, scientists worldwide have worked and put their
efforts on the development and distribution of vaccines. As of November 8,
2022, 199 vaccines were in pre-clinical phase and 172 in clinical development,
of which 49 vaccines could reach the phase III clinical trial and 11 vaccines,
the phase IV. Six vaccines are currently being administered worldwide. Most
vaccine developing strategies use the SARS-CoV-2 S-protein as the target
region.
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Conflict
of interest
The
authors declare that the current research was conducted in the absence of any
commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential
conflict of interest.
Funding
The
authors declare that the current study was not funded.
Author’s contributions
Hayat Ullah: conceptualization, data
curation, methodology.
Abdur Raziq: conceptualization, data curation.
Anbareen Gul: conceptualization, data
curation, methodology, original drafting.
Asad Ullah: original drafting.
Javaria Saeed: original drafting.
Navid Iqbal: original drafting.
Imrana Niaz Sultan: supervision, validation, drafting-revising and editing.
Afrasiab Khan Tareen: supervision,
validation, drafting-revising and editing.
Saadat Hussain: validation, drafting-revising
and editing.
Muhammad Waseem Khan: conceptualization, methodology, original drafting, supervision,
validation, drafting-revising and editing.
All authors reviewed and approved the final
version of the manuscript.
* Department of Environmental and Biological
Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, 70200, Kuopio, Finland.