CPI will play a key role in the mRNA workstream, focusing on the development, scale-up, manufacture and supply of the mRNA vaccine candidate under development at Imperial College London.
The workstream is a critical part of the Government’s Vaccine Taskforce response that is led by Chief Scientific Advisor Sir Patrick Vallance and Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-Tam. The task force will coordinate activities covering the development, trialing, testing and manufacture of a vaccine for COVID-19.
The mRNA workstream forms part of the efforts of the BioIndustries Association (BIA)-led Vaccine Manufacturing Group, which aims to ensure that when a vaccine becomes available, it can be rapidly scaled-up and manufactured in considerable quantities. The group is a collaboration of the public sector, industry and academia that builds on the UK’s world-leading science base.
"The collaboration brings together some of the brightest minds from the most innovative institutions and companies that the UK has to offer and represents a significant pillar of the UK’s efforts to fight back against COVID-19," CPI CEO Frank Millar said.
CPI is an independent technology innovation center and a founding member of the UK Government’s High Value Manufacturing Catapult, a network of world-leading technology and innovation centers designed to transform the UK’s capability for innovation in specific technology areas and markets to drive future economic growth.
What is an mRNA vaccine?
Vaccines work by training the body to recognize and respond to the proteins produced by disease-causing organisms, such as a virus or bacteria. Traditional vaccines are made up of small or inactivated doses of the whole disease-causing organism, or the proteins that it produces, which are introduced into the body to provoke the immune system into mounting a response.
DNA and mRNA vaccines, introduced around a decade ago, contain genetic material that instructs human cells to make a coronavirus protein.
The body’s immune system recognizes this protein as foreign and produces a response against it. DNA and mRNA (messenger RNA) vaccines are relatively easy to make in the laboratory and may be among the first to in clinical trials. There are, however, currently no licensed vaccines for any human disease using these technologies.