Sonia Trépanier
Laval University
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Featured researches published by Sonia Trépanier.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2010
Marc-André D’Aoust; Manon Couture; Nathalie Charland; Sonia Trépanier; Nathalie Landry; Frédéric Ors; Louis-P. Vézina
During the last decade, the spectre of an influenza pandemic of avian origin has led to a revision of national and global pandemic preparedness plans and has stressed the need for more efficient influenza vaccines and manufacturing practices. The 2009 A/H1N1 (swine flu) outbreak has further emphasized the necessity to develop new solutions for pandemic influenza vaccines. Influenza virus-like particles (VLPs)-non-infectious particles resembling the influenza virus-represent a promising alternative to inactivated and split-influenza virions as antigens, and they have shown uniqueness by inducing a potent immune response through both humoral and cellular components of the immune system. Our group has developed a plant-based transient influenza VLP manufacturing platform capable of producing influenza VLPs with unprecedented speed. Influenza VLP expression and purification technologies were brought to large-scale production of GMP-grade material, and pre-clinical studies have demonstrated that low doses of purified, plant-produced influenza VLPs induce a strong and broad immune response in mice and ferrets. This review positions the recent developments towards the successful production of influenza VLPs in plants, including the production of VLPs from other human viruses and other forms of influenza antigens. The platform developed for large-scale production of VLPs is also presented along with an assessment of the speed of the platform to produce the first experimental vaccine lots from the identification of a new influenza strain.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2008
Marc-André D’Aoust; Pierre-Olivier Lavoie; Manon Couture; Sonia Trépanier; Jean-Martin Guay; Michèle Dargis; Sébastien Mongrand; Nathalie Landry; Brian J. Ward; Louis-P. Vézina
A strain-specific vaccine represents the best possible response to the threat of an influenza pandemic. Rapid delivery of such a vaccine to the worlds population before the peak of the first infection wave seems to be an unattainable goal with the current influenza vaccine manufacturing capacity. Plant-based transient expression is one of the few production systems that can meet the anticipated surge requirement. To assess the capability of plant agroinfiltration to produce an influenza vaccine, we expressed haemagglutinin (HA) from strains A/Indonesia/5/05 (H5N1) and A/New Caledonia/20/99 (H1N1) by agroinfiltration of Nicotiana benthamiana plants. Size distribution analysis of protein content in infiltrated leaves revealed that HA was predominantly assembled into high-molecular-weight structures. H5-containing structures were purified and examination by transmission electron microscopy confirmed virus-like particle (VLP) assembly. High-performance thin layer chromatography analysis of VLP lipid composition highlighted polar and neutral lipid contents comparable with those of purified plasma membranes from tobacco plants. Electron microscopy of VLP-producing cells in N. benthamiana leaves confirmed that VLPs accumulated in apoplastic indentations of the plasma membrane. Finally, immunization of mice with two doses of as little as 0.1 microg of purified influenza H5-VLPs triggered a strong immune response against the homologous virus, whereas two doses of 0.5 microg of H5-VLPs conferred complete protection against a lethal challenge with the heterologous A/Vietnam/1194/04 (H5N1) strain. These results show, for the first time, that plants are capable of producing enveloped influenza VLPs budding from the plasma membrane; such VLPs represent very promising candidates for vaccination against influenza pandemic strains.
Clinical Immunology | 2014
Nathalie Landry; Stéphane Pillet; David Favre; Jean-François Poulin; Sonia Trépanier; Bader Yassine-Diab; Brian J. Ward
Cell-mediated immunity plays a major role in long-lived, cross-reactive protection against influenza virus. We measured long-term poly-functional and cross-reactive T cell responses to influenza hemagglutinin (HA) elicited by a new plant-made Virus-Like Particle (VLP) vaccine targeting either H1N1 A/California/7/09 (H1) or H5N1 A/Indonesia/5/05 (H5). In two independent clinical trials, we characterized the CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell homotypic and heterotypic responses 6 months after different vaccination regimens. Responses of VLP-vaccinated subjects were compared with placebo and/or a commercial trivalent inactivated vaccine (TIV:Fluzone™) recipients. Both H1 and H5 VLP vaccines elicited significantly greater poly-functional CD4(+) T cell responses than placebo and TIV. Poly-functional CD8(+) T cell responses were also observed after H1 VLP vaccination. Our results show that plant-made HA VLP vaccines elicit both strong antibody responses and poly-functional, cross-reactive memory T cells that persist for at least 6 months after vaccination.
Vaccine | 2014
Brian J. Ward; Nathalie Landry; Sonia Trépanier; Geneviève Mercier; Michèle Dargis; Manon Couture; Marc-André D’Aoust; Louis-P. Vézina
BACKGROUND Plant-made biotherapeutics are gathering momentum and some plant glycoproteins are allergens. Glycans with core β1-2xylose and α1,3fucose motifs and antennae terminated by mannose residues (e.g.: MMXF) are found on several plant allergens and can cross-react with glyco-epitopes from other sources. To date, reactivity to these cross-reactive determinants has not been associated with clinical symptoms. OBJECTIVE We produced VLP vaccines bearing the hemagglutinin(HA) of H5(A/Indonesia/5/05) or H1(A/California/07/09) influenza viruses by transfection of Nicotiana benthamiana. Subjects enrolled in Phase I/II trials were followed for evidence of allergy/hypersensitivity and development of antibodies against plant glyco-epitopes. METHODS A total of 280/349 subjects received either one (H1) or 2 doses (H5) of vaccine (5-45 μg of HA/dose) intramuscularly including 40 with pre-existing plant allergies. Subjects were monitored for 6 months. IgG and IgE to plant glyco-epitopes were measured by ELISA using corn-/egg-derived avidin and bromelain as target antigens. RESULTS No subject developed allergic/hypersensitivity symptoms. Some (34%) developed transient IgG and, in some cases IgE, to plant glyco-epitopes but no subject mounted an IgE response to the MMXF motif. Antibodies returned to baseline by 6 months in most subjects. CONCLUSION VLP vaccines bearing influenza HA glycoproteins can elicit transient IgG and, in some cases, IgE responses that are not associated with either the development or worsening of allergic/hypersensitivity symptoms.
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics | 2018
Brian J. Ward; Stéphane Pillet; Nathalie Charland; Sonia Trépanier; Julie Couillard; Nathalie Landry
ABSTRACT The search for a test that can predict vaccine efficacy is an important part of any vaccine development program. Although regulators hesitate to acknowledge any test as a true ‘correlate of protection’, there are many precedents for defining ‘surrogate’ assays. Surrogates can be powerful tools for vaccine optimization, licensure, comparisons between products and development of improved products. When such tests achieve ‘reference’ status however, they can inadvertently become barriers to new technologies that do not work the same way as existing vaccines. This is particularly true when these tests are based upon circularly-defined ‘reference’ or, even worse, proprietary reagents. The situation with inactivated influenza vaccines is a good example of this phenomenon. The most frequently used tests to define vaccine-induced immunity are all serologic assays: hemagglutination inhibition (HI), single radial hemolysis (SRH) and microneutralization (MN). The first two, and particularly the HI assay, have achieved reference status and criteria have been established in many jurisdictions for their use in licensing new vaccines and to compare the performance of different vaccines. However, all of these assays are based on biological reagents that are notoriously difficult to standardize and can vary substantially by geography, by chance (i.e. developing reagents in eggs that may not antigenitically match wild-type viruses) and by intention (ie: choosing reagents that yield the most favorable results). This review describes attempts to standardize these assays to improve their performance as surrogates, the dangers of over-reliance on ‘reference’ serologic assays, the ways that manufacturers can exploit the existing regulatory framework to make their products ‘look good’ and the implications of this long-established system for the introduction of novel influenza vaccines.
npj Vaccines | 2018
Stéphane Pillet; Éric Aubin; Sonia Trépanier; Jean-François Poulin; Bader Yassine-Diab; Jan ter Meulen; Brian J. Ward; Nathalie Landry
The hemagglutinination inhibition (HI) response remains the gold standard used for the licensure of influenza vaccines. However, cell-mediated immunity (CMI) deserves more attention, especially when evaluating H5N1 influenza vaccines that tend to induce poor HI response. In this study, we measured the humoral response (HI) and CMI (flow cytometry) during a Phase II dose-ranging clinical trial (NCT01991561). Subjects received two intramuscular doses, 21 days apart, of plant-derived virus-like particles (VLP) presenting the A/Indonesia/05/2005 H5N1 influenza hemagglutinin protein (H5) at the surface of the VLP (H5VLP). The vaccine was co-administrated with Alhydrogel® or with a glucopyranosyl lipid adjuvant-stable emulsion (GLA-SE). We demonstrated that low doses (3.75 or 7.5 μg H5VLP) of GLA-SE-adjuvanted vaccines induced HI responses that met criteria for licensure at both antigen doses tested. Alhydrogel adjuvanted vaccines induced readily detectable HI response that however failed to meet licensure criteria at any of three doses (10, 15 and 20 μg) tested. The H5VLP also induced a sustained (up to 6 months) polyfunctional and cross-reactive HA-specific CD4+ T cell response in all vaccinated groups. Interestingly, the frequency of central memory Th1-primed precursor cells before the boost significantly correlated with HI titers 21 days after the boost. The ability of the low dose GLA-SE-adjuvanted H5VLP to elicit both humoral response and a sustained cross-reactive CMI in healthy adults is very attractive and could result in significant dose-sparing in a pandemic situation.Avian influenza: Viral shell vaccine elicits a rounded antiviral responseA H5N1 bird flu vaccine consisting of the virus’ protein shell could overcome current production woes. Canadian researchers, led by the Quebec-based biotech Medicago, constructed a plant-derived, virus-like particle vaccine that presented influenza hemagglutinin surface proteins designed to prime an immune system against future infection. When injected alongside an immunity-boosting adjuvant known as GLA-SE, the vaccine elicited levels of protective antibodies that met the requirement for EU licensing. The researchers also explain that levels of immune cells recognizing the hemagglutinin should also be considered as important indicators of H5N1 vaccine performance, as cell-based immunity plays an important part in influenza protection. Current H5N1 vaccine production is limited as the virus kills the eggs in which the progenitor virus is produced, a problem Medicago’s vaccine may be able to overcome thanks to its non-virulent virus-like particles.
Archive | 2014
Louis-P. Vézina; Brian J. Ward; Marc-André D’Aoust; Manon Couture; Sonia Trépanier; Andrew Sheldon; Nathalie Landry
Very few vaccine platform technologies can pretend to provide an adequate response to the threat of pandemic influenza. Most, if not all, current manufacturing approaches are too slow to respond, have limited surge capacity, and/or are very expensive to operate. Here, we describe the development and clinical testing of a new VLP pandemic vaccine candidate produced under standard good manufacturing process (GMP) conditions from a plant-based manufacturing system. Our results show that this production system can produce high yields of influenza hemagglutinin antigen at high purity in a very short period of time. Because this platform uses recombinant technology and plants as the “bioreactors” to produce the vaccine antigen, the lag time to production of the first doses is short (only 3–4 weeks after publication of the novel influenza strain HA sequence data), and the surge capacity is excellent. These vaccines have been well tolerated in >800 human subjects dosed to date and trigger strong and cross-reactive immune responses at relatively low doses.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2006
Daniel Rivard; Raphaël Anguenot; Van Quy Le; Louis-Philippe Vezina; Sonia Trépanier; Dominique Michaud
Archive | 2008
Marc-Andre D'aoust; Manon Couture; Frédéric Ors; Sonia Trépanier; Pierre-Olivier Lavoie; Michèle Dargis; Louis-Philippe Vezina; Nathalie Landry
Archive | 2009
Marc-Andre D'aoust; Manon Couture; Frédéric Ors; Sonia Trépanier; Pierre-Olivier Lavoie; Michèle Dargis; Louis-Philippe Vezina; Nathalie Landry