Could this Bristol business be on its way to helping create a Covid-19 vaccine?

A Bristol business has developed the capabilities to produce potential vaccines to counter the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
The biotech company Imophoron – which is based in the Unit DX Incubator- has produced multiple COVID-19 vaccine candidates, based on its novel vaccine platform (named the ADDomer), within weeks of the virus sequence being made available.
Imophoron has joined the University of Bristol’s COVID-19 Emergency Research (UNCOVER) Group, and is leading on vaccine development. Together, they will soon test their COVID-19 candidate vaccines in-vivo in a pre-clinical programme.
Frederic Garzoni, Founder and CEO at Imophoron, said: “We have optimized our process and can now design and roll-out potential vaccines in about two weeks, ready for testing. With our technology, we hope to contribute to resolving the major health and economic threats caused by emerging viruses such as COVID-19.”
The start-up, based at the Unit DX Incubator in Bristol, UK, is developing a new, highly adaptable, easy-to-manufacture, rapid-response platform for vaccines to combat present and future infectious diseases.
A key benefit is the speed with which candidate vaccines can be identified and could be manufactured in large quantities. Imophoron’s vaccines are extremely stable and require no refrigeration, potentially enabling unrestricted distribution world-wide. Importantly, the high specificity of the vaccine particle promises a reduced risk of potentially dangerous side effects, seen with some novel vaccines.
Professor Imre Berger, co-founder at Imophoron and Director of the University’s Max Planck-Bristol Centre for Minimal Biology, added: “COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) infects cells using its so-called ‘Spike’ protein. Most COVID-19 vaccines now being fast-tracked present the complete Spike to the immune system, which reacts by making antibodies. This approach risks inducing antibodies that bind to the wrong parts of the Spike and could make the disease even worse. In vaccines for SARS-CoV-1, this sometimes resulted in severe lung tissue damage; Imophoron’s vaccines, in contrast, present only very specific parts of the Spike essential for cell entry and are potentially much less prone to this risk.”
Imophoron’s platform, the ADDomer, is a synthetic, self-assembling, nature-inspired virus-like particle (VLP). Currently at pre-clinical stage, vaccines based on the ADDomer will need to be studied in human clinical trials once they have completed pre-clinical tests.
