Pharmaceutics (May 2024)

Use of Transient Transfection for cGMP Manufacturing of eOD-GT8 60mer, a Self-Assembling Nanoparticle Germline-Targeting HIV-1 Vaccine Candidate

  • Vaneet K. Sharma,
  • Sergey Menis,
  • Evan T. Brower,
  • Eddy Sayeed,
  • Jim Ackland,
  • Angela Lombardo,
  • Christopher A. Cottrell,
  • Jonathan L. Torres,
  • Thomas Hassell,
  • Andrew B. Ward,
  • Vadim Tsvetnitsky,
  • William R. Schief

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16060742
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 742

Abstract

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We describe the current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) production and subsequent characterization of eOD-GT8 60mer, a glycosylated self-assembling nanoparticle HIV-1 vaccine candidate and germline targeting priming immunogen. Production was carried out via transient expression in the human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cell line followed by a combination of purification techniques. A large-scale cGMP (200 L) production run yielded 354 mg of the purified eOD-GT8 60mer drug product material, which was formulated at 1 mg/mL in 10% sucrose in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) at pH 7.2. The clinical trial material was comprehensively characterized for purity, antigenicity, glycan composition, amino acid sequence, and aggregation and by several safety-related tests during cGMP lot release. A comparison of the purified products produced at the 1 L scale and 200 L cGMP scale demonstrated the consistency and robustness of the transient transfection upstream process and the downstream purification strategies. The cGMP clinical trial material was tested in a Phase 1 clinical trial (NCT03547245), is currently being stored at −80 °C, and is on a stability testing program as per regulatory guidelines. The methods described here illustrate the utility of transient transfection for cGMP production of complex products such as glycosylated self-assembling nanoparticles.

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