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Saturday, December 4, 2021

Ga. State: Novel broad-spectrum antiviral drug class with activity against SARS-CoV-2

 The COVID-19 pandemic and resurgence of infections by other respiratory RNA viruses such as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in children has caused an urgent need for the development of orally available broad-spectrum antiviral therapeutics. 

In a study published online on Dec. 2 in Science, researchers in the Institute for Biomedical Sciences at Georgia State University report a new candidate ribonucleoside analog, 4’-fluorouridine (4’-FlU), that has potent antiviral activity against SARS-CoV-2, RSV and other respiratory RNA viruses in cell culture, human organoids and different animal models when administered orally once-daily. 

“Mechanistically, we show that 4’-FlU is in a different class from molnupiravir that is currently considered for regulatory approval,” said Dr. Richard Plemper, senior author of the study, Distinguished University Professor and director of the Center for Translational Antiviral Research at Georgia State. “4’-FlU does not act as a mutagen but induces termination of the viral polymerase, aborting replication of the viral genome. There is an urgent need to expand the therapeutic arsenal against SARS-CoV-2 and 4’-FlU has strong developmental promise as a companion drug.”

In the study, 4’-FlU was tested against different SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern in ferrets, which have emerged as a leading model for drug testing, and against respiratory syncytial virus in mice. The researchers found that this drug potently blocked SARS-CoV-2 replication including the gamma and delta variants in the ferret, and efficiently suppressed RSV burden in mouse lungs. 

“We are excited that 4’-FlU is the only orally available antiviral candidate currently developed against SARS-CoV-2 that is active when given once-daily,” said Dr. Julien Sourimant, first author of the study and a researcher in Dr. Plemper’s lab in the Institute for Biomedical Sciences, “which should be a major asset in ensuring outpatient compliance.”

This research on 4’-FlU emerged from a collaboration of the team at Georgia State University with researchers at Emory University and the Texas Biomedical Research Institute. The study was funded by public health service grants from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to Georgia State University. 

Co-authors of the study include J. Sourimant, C.M. Lieber, M. Aggarwal, R.M. Cox, J.D. Wolf, J.-J. Yeong, M. Toots and R.K. Plemper at Georgia State University; C. Ye and L. Martinez-Sobrido at Texas Biomedical Research Institute; and Z. Sticher, A.A. Kolykhalov, G.R. Bluemling, M.G. Natchus and G.R. Painter at Emory University. 

COVID-19 Delta variant may have increased ability to evade vaccine-induced immunity

 Vaccines are effective in decreasing hospitalization and deaths from COVID-19 infection but the emergence of viral variants of concern may diminish their efficacy. A study publishing December 2nd in PLOS Pathogens by Emma Thomson, Brian Willett, and colleagues at the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, United Kingdom and colleagues suggests that COVID-19 Delta variant may be more successful at evading the protective response of vaccines.

Mutations change the shape of the COVID-19 spike protein, preventing antibody recognition and enabling the virus to escape vaccine-induced immunity; however, the extent to which vaccine recipients are immune from the Delta variant is unknown. To quantify the capacity of different variants (Alpha, Beta and Delta) to evade protective immune response in vaccines, researchers analyzed serum samples collected from healthy people who had received either the Pfizer or Astra Zeneca vaccine. 156 people had received two doses and 50 people had received one dose. They exposed SARS-CoV-2 proteins in a virus model system to sera from vaccinated people and observed the antibody response, measuring how effectively antibodies prevented each variant from infecting cells (virus neutralization).

The researchers found that vaccines conferred protection from all COVID-19 variants but noted reduced antibody neutralization of both the Beta and Delta variants. Across all vaccinated individuals, the Delta variant reduced the immune response in recipients of both the Pfizer and Astra Zeneca vaccine 4.31 and 5.11-fold respectively. The study was not designed to measure vaccine efficacy directly, although it was in keeping with recent findings from Public Health England of slightly lower vaccine effectiveness against the Delta variant than previous variants. It also did not report on serological study of people who received the Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccines.

According to the authors, “While vaccines remain highly effective at preventing severe infection and death, ongoing monitoring of neutralization against new variants alongside studies of vaccine effectiveness are indicated as the virus continues to evolve over time, especially in vulnerable groups. Booster vaccines reduce the chance of being infected with currently circulating new variants. Newer updated vaccine designs are also likely to be required in time to prevent productive infection with newer variants of the virus.”


Citation: Davis C, Logan N, Tyson G, Orton R, Harvey WT, Perkins JS, et al. (2021) Reduced neutralisation of the Delta (B.1.617.2) SARS-CoV-2 variant of concern following vaccination. PLoS Pathog 17(12): e1010022. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010022

Author Countries: United Kingdom

Funding: The COVID-19 DeplOyed VaccinE (DOVE) study is funded by the Medical Research Council core award (MC UU 1201412; M.P) We acknowledge the support of the G2P-UK National Virology Consortium (MR/W005611/1) funded by the UKRI (M.P.,E.C.T.). COG-UK is supported by funding from the Medical Research Council (MRC) part of UK Research & Innovation (UKRI), the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) and Genome Research Limited, operating as the Wellcome Sanger Institute (G.M., R.M.B., D.L.R., E.C.T.). W.T.H. is funded by the MRC (MR/R024758/1). N.L. and B.J.W. were funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, BB/R004250/1), G.T. was funded by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC, BB/R019843/1). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. We are indebted to Therese McSorley for recruiting participants to the DOVE study. We thank all the researchers who have shared genome data openly via the GISAID Initiative.

How SARS-CoV-2 variants are evolving new ways to evade antibodies, vaccines

 At a glance

  • New study models future SARS-CoV-2 mutations and forecasts their ability to evade immune defenses developed by vaccines and antibody-based treatments.
  • Since the study was completed, several of the predicted mutations appeared in omicron, the most recently identified SARS-CoV-2 variant, offering insight into how omicron might be able to escape immune defense generated by mRNA vaccines and monoclonal antibody treatments for COVID-19.
  • The researchers modeled their predictions of future mutations using a combination of variables, including rare mutations documented in immunocompromised patients, existing SARS-CoV-2 genotypes, and the virus’s current molecular structure and behavior.
  • Findings highlight the ability of SARS-CoV-2 to shape-shift, underscoring the likelihood of new variants that contain multiple high-risk mutations and are capable of evading antibody-based treatments and vaccines.
  • The study highlights the urgent need to help curb viral evolution and future mutations through mitigation measures and by ensuring global immunity through mass vaccination.

In an effort to predict the future evolutionary maneuvers of SARS-CoV-2, a research team led by investigators at Harvard Medical School has identified several likely mutations that would allow the virus to evade immune defenses, including natural immunity acquired through infection and developed from vaccination as well as antibody-based treatments.

The study, published Dec. 2 in Science as an accelerated publication for immediate release, was designed to gauge how SARS-CoV-2 might evolve as it continues to adapt to its human hosts and in doing so to help public health officials and scientists prepare for future mutations.

Indeed, as the research was nearing publication, a new variant of concern, dubbed omicron, entered the scene and was subsequently found to contain several of the antibody-evading mutations the researchers predicted in the newly published paper. As of Dec. 1, omicron has been identified in 25 countries in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and North and South America, a list that is growing daily.

The researchers caution that the study findings are not directly applicable to omicron because how this specific variant behaves will depend on the interplay among its own unique set of mutations–at least 30 in the viral spike protein—and on how it competes against other active strains circulating in populations around the world. Nonetheless, the researchers said, the study gives important clues about particular areas of concern with omicron, and also serves as a primer on other mutations that might appear in future variants.

“Our findings suggest that great caution is advised with omicron because these mutations have proven quite capable of evading monoclonal antibodies used to treat newly infected patients and antibodies derived from mRNA vaccines,” said study senior author Jonathan Abraham, assistant professor of microbiology in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS and an infectious disease specialist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The researchers did not study response to antibodies developed from non-mRNA vaccines.

The longer the virus continues to replicate in humans, Abraham noted, the more likely it is that it will continue to evolve novel mutations that develop new ways to spread in the face of existing natural immunity, vaccines, and treatments. That means that public health efforts to prevent the spread of the virus, including mass vaccinations worldwide as soon as possible, are crucial both to prevent illness and to reduce opportunities for the virus to evolve, Abraham said.

The findings also highlight the importance of ongoing anticipatory research into the potential future evolution of not only SARS-CoV-2 but other pathogens as well, the researchers said.

“To get out of this pandemic, we need to stay ahead of this virus, as opposed to playing catch up,” said study co-lead author Katherine Nabel, a fifth-year student in the Harvard/MIT MD-PhD Program. “Our approach is unique in that instead of studying individual antibody mutations in isolation, we studied them as part of composite variants that contain many simultaneous mutations at once—we thought this might be where the virus was headed. Unfortunately, this seems to be the case with omicron.”

Many studies have looked at the mechanisms developed in newly dominant SARS-CoV-2 strains that enable the virus to resist the protective power of antibodies to prevent infection and serious disease.

This past summer, instead of waiting to see what the next new variant might bring, Abraham set out to determine how possible future mutations might impact the virus’s ability to infect cells and to evade immune defenses—work that he did in collaboration with colleagues from HMS, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston University School of Medicine and National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL), and AbbVie Bioresearch Center.

To estimate how the virus might transform itself next, the researchers followed clues in the chemical and physical structure of the virus and looked for rare mutations found in immunocompromised individuals and in a global database of virus sequences. In lab-based studies using non-infectious virus-like particles, the researchers found combinations of multiple, complex mutations that would allow the virus to infect human cells while reducing or neutralizing the protective power of antibodies.

The researchers focused on a part of the coronavirus’s spike protein called the receptor-binding domain, which the virus uses to latch on to human cells. The spike protein allows the virus to enter human cells, where it initiates self-replication and, eventually, leads to infection. Most antibodies function by locking on to the same locations on the virus’s spike protein receptor-binding domain to block it from entering cells and causing infection.

Mutation and evolution are a normal part of a virus’s natural history. Every time a new copy of a virus is made, there’s a chance that a copy error—a genetic typo—might be introduced. As a virus encounters selective pressure from the host’s immune system, copy errors that allow the virus to avoid being blocked by existing antibodies have a better chance of surviving and continuing to replicate. Mutations that allow a virus to evade antibodies in this way are known as escape mutations.

The researchers demonstrated that the virus could develop large numbers of simultaneous escape mutations while retaining the ability to connect to the receptors it needs to infect a human cell. The team worked with so-called pseudotype viruses, lab-made stand-ins for a virus constructed by combining harmless, noninfectious virus-like particles with pieces of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein containing the suspected escape mutations. The experiments showed that pseudo-type viruses containing up to seven of these escape mutations are more resistant to neutralization by therapeutic antibodies and serum from mRNA vaccine recipients.

This level of complex evolution had not been seen in widespread strains of the virus at the time the researchers began their experiments. But with the emergence of the omicron variant, this level of complex mutation in the receptor-binding domain is no longer hypothetical. The delta variant had only two mutations in its receptor binding domain, and the pseudotypes Abraham’s team studied had up to seven mutations, omicron appears to have fifteen, including several of the specific mutations that his team analyzed.

In a series of experiments, the researchers performed biochemical assays to see how antibodies would bind to spike proteins containing escape mutations. Several of the mutations, including some of those found in omicron, enabled the pseudotypes to completely evade therapeutic antibodies, including those found in monoclonal antibody cocktail therapies.

The researchers also found one antibody that was able to neutralize all of the tested variants effectively. However, they also noted that the virus would be able to evade that antibody if the spike protein developed a single mutation that adds a sugar molecule at the location where the antibody binds to the virus. That, in essence, would prevent the antibody from doing its job.

The researchers noted that in rare instances, circulating strains of SARS-CoV-2 have been found to gain this mutation. When this happens, it is likely the result of selective pressure from the immune system, the researchers said. Understanding the role of this rare mutation, they added, is critical to being better prepared before it emerges as part of dominant strains.

While the researchers did not directly study the pseudotype virus’s ability to escape immunity from natural infection, findings from the team’s previous work with variants carrying fewer mutations suggest that the these newer, highly mutated variants would also adeptly evade antibodies acquired through natural infection.

In another experiment, the pseudotypes were exposed to blood serum from individuals who had received an mRNA vaccine. For some of the highly mutated variants, serum from single-dose vaccine recipients completely lost the ability to neutralize the virus. In samples taken from people who had received a second dose of vaccine, the vaccine retained at least some effectiveness against all variants, including some extensively mutated pseudotypes.

The researchers note that their analysis suggests that repeated immunization even with the original spike protein antigen may be critical to countering highly mutated SARS-CoV-2 spike protein variants.

“This virus is a shape-shifter,” Abraham said. “The great structural flexibility we saw in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein suggests that omicron is not likely to be the end of the story for this virus.”

FUNDING

This research was supported by the Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness; U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U01CK000490); National Institutes of Health (T32GM007753); Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center, from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science (1UL1TR002541-01); Barbara and Amos Hostetter; and the Chleck Family Foundation.

DISCLOSURES
Jonathan Abraham, Lars Clark, and Sarah Clark are inventors on a provisional patent application filed by Harvard University that includes antibodies reported in this work. Sarah Turbett receives monetary compensation from UpToDate, which provides clinical decision support. 

Paper DOI:
doi/10.1126/science.abl6251

Release written by Jake Miller

About Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School has more than 11,000 faculty working in the 11 basic and social science departments comprising the Blavatnik Institute and at the 15 Harvard-affiliated teaching hospitals and research institutes: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Children’s Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Cambridge Health Alliance, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Hebrew SeniorLife, Joslin Diabetes Center, Judge Baker Children’s Center, Massachusetts Eye and Ear/Schepens Eye Research Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, McLean Hospital, Mount Auburn Hospital, Spaulding Rehabilitation Network and VA Boston Healthcare System.

 

 

 

Hospitals have ethical obligation to care for unvaccinated severe COVID-19 patients

 A new opinion piece published online in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society provides an exhaustive examination of the ethics of using hospital resources on unvaccinated-by-choice COVID-19 pneumonia patients, versus patients with other serious illnesses whose diseases are not progressing as quickly. 

In “Caring for the Unvaccinated,” William F. Parker, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine and assistant director, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, looked at cases in which hospitals delayed time-sensitive and medically necessary procedures for vaccinated adults when they were overwhelmed with unvaccinated patients who had severe, life-threatening COVID-19 pneumonia and suggested an ethical framework for triaging these patients.

“These vaccinated patients are directly harmed when hospitals use all their resources to care for the many unvaccinated patients with COVID-19,” he writes.  “For example, delaying breast cancer surgery by just four weeks increases the relative risk of death from the disease by 8 percent.”

Dr. Parker argues for a contingency care standard that prioritizes emergency life-support, regardless of vaccination status, in order to save the most lives.  “Simply rejecting the use of vaccination in prioritization of medical resources without analysis ignores the very real tradeoffs at play during a pandemic.  The pain and suffering of the vaccinated from deferred medical care require a deeper defense of caring for the unvaccinated.”

 

Eliminating the Double Standard That Harms Patients in Vulnerable Communities

He states, “Even though the vast majority of patients who develop life-threatening COVID pneumonia are unvaccinated, hospitals still have ethical obligations to expand capacity and focus operations on caring for them—even if it means making vaccinated patients wait for important but less urgent care like cancer and heart surgeries.”

“If tertiary care centers turn inward and stop taking transfers of COVID-19 patients from overwhelmed community hospitals, this will result in de facto triage in favor of lower benefit care and cause systematic harm to both the vaccinated and unvaccinated in vulnerable communities,” he adds.  “Hospitals must justify their nonprofit status by accepting transfers and prioritizing life-saving care during a pandemic surge.”

He points to Los Angeles County during the winter surge, in which the public health department had to issue an order forcing elite hospitals to stop doing financially lucrative elective procedures and accept patient transfers from community hospitals that lacked capacity to handle all of the COVID-19 patients who required intensive care.

  

Reciprocity and Proportionality

The principle of reciprocity supports a possible tiebreaker role for vaccination status when two patients have equivalent survival benefit from a scarce health care resource.  However, a universal exclusion of the unvaccinated from life support during a pandemic surge fails the test of proportionality for reciprocity, according to Dr. Parker.

Reciprocity is rewarding one positive action with another. One example of this principle is giving vaccinated people access to sporting or entertainment events that are off limits to the unvaccinated (even if the unvaccinated test negative for COVID-19).  Proportionality is the principle that “payback” should be proportional to the magnitude of the act.  For example, living kidney donors get moved way up the waitlist- the equivalent of four years of waiting time on dialysis.  This satisfies the proportionality principle.

Dr. Parker points out that while the 8 percent increased relative risk of death from deferring breast cancer surgery is awful, the absolute increase in risk is only one per 100, and perhaps only one per 200 for a two-week deferral.

“After the surge is over, the hospital can catch up on deferred elective surgeries,” he writes. “The harm from a coronary artery bypass or cancer surgery delayed two weeks is real, but tiny in comparison to certain death from denying life support for respiratory failure.”

He concludes, “There is a defensible role for vaccination status in triage as a limited tiebreaker, not as a categorical exclusion, but only in the context of a well-defined and transparent triage algorithm.  Despite the enormous financial pressure to do otherwise, elite academic centers are obligated to prioritize life support for emergency conditions to save as many lives as possible during COVID-19 surges.”    

New vaccine ingredient shows promise

 Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), have found a possible way to improve the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines—and any vaccine.

 

Their new research, published in Science Immunology, shows that a "combination" adjuvant called a saponin/TLR agonist may boost the protective power of vaccines.

 

"This is super exciting," says LJI Professor Shane Crotty, Ph.D., a member of the LJI Center for Infectious Disease and Vaccine Research. "We're really hoping this adjuvant can help out."

 

Vaccines work by showing the human immune system just a small piece of a pathogen. The immune system sees this "antigen" and begins making the immune cells and antibodies needed to fight the real virus.

 

Antigens rarely work alone. Scientists use particles called adjuvants in most vaccine designs. Adjuvants are like red flags that lead the immune system to react more strongly to the antigen and develop the well-honed T cells and B cells that protect the body for years.

 

The FDA has only approved five adjuvants for use in the United States. Crotty, a world expert in vaccine research, says scientists need new adjuvant options as they design more innovative vaccines against viruses like SARS-CoV-2 and HIV.

 

"Licensed vaccines depend on adjuvants, and there are very few adjuvants available for use in humans," Crotty says.

 

"New adjuvants that help drive particular aspects of antibody or T cell-mediated immunity may be an important part of successfully developing vaccines against challenging pathogens such as HIV, TB, and malaria," adds study co-leader MIT Professor Darrell Irvine, Ph.D., who also serves as an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

 

Meet the SMNP adjuvant

 

The scientists were interested in testing a combined saponin/TLR agonist adjuvant because the two molecules have shown promise when tested separately. Saponin adjuvants have proven safe and are already approved for use in the Shingrix vaccine for shingles. TLR agonists are known for stimulating the innate immune response, the system that first detects an antigen.

 

For the new study, Irvine's lab led the synthesis and design of the saponin/TLR agonist adjuvant. There are many types of TLR agonists, so the researchers chose to test a TLR4 agonist called MPLA. This molecule naturally joins together with saponin molecules to form saponin/MPLA nanoparticles (SMNP).

 

At LJI, Scientific Associate Yu Kato, Ph.D., started by spearheading experiments to understand exactly what makes saponin adjuvants effective.

 

Experiments in mice showed that a saponin adjuvant triggers a strong response from the body's germinal centers, structures in the lymph nodes that pump out B cells. A saponin adjuvant also led to better T cell and class-switched antibody responses (which allow antibodies to switch targets as they develop), compared with a range of alternative adjuvants.

 

Kato found that saponin makes such a difference because it promotes a process called lymphatic drainage, where lymphatic fluid moves into the lymph nodes and alerts immune cells around the body to the presence of an invading pathogen.

 

While the saponin adjuvant alone led to a good response in mice, the TLR agonist was the secret weapon. The scientists tested how the immune system would respond when both adjuvants were combined with a protein from HIV (a vaccine candidate provided by the Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology & Immunogen Discovery (CHAVI-ID) at Scripps Research). 

 

What's special about SMNP?

 

The researchers discovered that this SMNP combination works so well because it activates so many different parts of the immune system. While saponin and the TLR agonist have their jobs, combining them also prompts the immune system to make more types of T follicular helper cells, which strengthen the immune response, and more interleukin-21, an antiviral molecule.

 

"It was more than just an additive effect," says Kato. "The combination led to more way more B cells too, and for B cells to produce antibodies, they need help from those T follicular helper cells."

 

Overall, the researchers showed that SMNP was safe and effective. While more clinical research needs to be done, Crotty says several applications for SMNP come to mind immediately. Should it be approved, Crotty says SMNP may be a good addition to the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine, which currently uses a more traditional, protein adjuvant.

 

"This has, potentially, a big impact for human health," says Crotty.

 

Designing new adjuvants is especially important for preventing the spread of HIV, explains Kato. Scientists have been trying to develop an effective HIV vaccine for more than 30 years, but it has been tough to get the immune system to mount an effective response to a vaccine.

 

"If we keep doing the same thing, these vaccines are not going to work," Kato says. "We need to do things smarter. That's why it is critical for us to understand how adjuvants really work."

 

Additional authors of the study, "A particulate saponin/TLR agonist vaccine adjuvant

alters lymph flow and modulates adaptive immunity," include Murillo Silva (co-first author), Mariane B. Melo, Ivy Phung, Brian L. Freeman, Zhongming Li, Kangsan Roh, Jan W. Van Wijnbergen, Hannah Watkins, Chiamaka A. Enemuo, Brittany L. Hartwell, Jason Y. H. Chang, Shuhao Xiao, Kristen A. Rodrigues, Kimberly M. Cirelli, Na Li, Sonya Haupt, Aereas Aung, Benjamin Cossette, Wuhbet Abraham, Swati Kataria, Raiza Bastidas, Jinal Bhiman, Caitlyn Linde, Nathaniel I. Bloom, Bettina Groschel, Erik Georgeson, Nicole Phelps Ayush Thomas, Julia Bals, Diane G. Carnathan, Daniel Lingwood, Dennis R. Burton, Galit Alter, Timothy P. Padera, Angela M. Belcher, William R. Schief, Guido Silvestri and Ruth M. Ruprecht.

 

The study was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases  (UM1AI100663, UM1AI144462, R01CA214913, R01AI125068, R01AI137057, R01AI153098, P01AI104715, and P01AI048240) ; the Marble Center for Cancer Nanomedicine, the U.S. Army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies at MIT under Cooperative Agreement number W911NF-18-2-0048, the Koch Institute Support (core) Grant P30-CA14051 from the National Cancer Institute, a National Research Service Award (T32 AI07386), the IAVI Neutralizing Antibody Center, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Collaboration for AIDS Vaccine Discovery funding for the IAVI NAC, and the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard. The Yerkes National Primate Research Center is supported by the base grant P51 OD011132.

 

DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abf1152

 

 

 

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About La Jolla Institute for Immunology

The La Jolla Institute for Immunology is dedicated to understanding the intricacies and power of the immune system so that we may apply that knowledge to promote human health and prevent a wide range of diseases. Since its founding in 1988 as an independent, nonprofit research organization, the Institute has made numerous advances leading toward its goal: life without disease.

 

 

Pear Therapeutics Stock to Begin Trading After SPAC Merger

 Pear Therapeutics received its second breakthrough device designation from the Food and Drug Administration for its reSET-A product candidate that is designed for the treatment of alcohol substance use disorder.

Pear Therapeutics, a developer of software-based medicines called prescription digital therapeutics, on Friday completed a merger with special purpose acquisition company Thimble Point Acquisition  (THMA and will begin trading Monday on Nasdaq under the PEAR ticker.

Thimble Point's stockholders on Nov. 30 voted to approve the business combination, which was earlier approved by Pear's shareholders.

The business combination generated about $175 million in gross proceeds, which Pear will use to further capitalize the company, it said in a Friday statement.

“My Pearmates and I are proud to continue our leadership in the creation of prescription digital therapeutics,” Pear's CEO Corey McCann said in a statement. “As a public company, we aim to accelerate our vision to increase access to PDTs by further commercializing our three FDA-authorized PDTs, expanding public and private payer adoption, and advancing our pipeline of PDTs. Thanks to all of our investors for supporting our successful transition.” 

https://www.thestreet.com/investing/pear-therapeutics-stock-to-begin-trading-after-spac-merger

Life science-focused SPAC BioPlus Acquisition prices $200 million IPO

 BioPlus Acquisition, a blank check company targeting the life sciences industry, raised $200 million by offering 20 million units at $10. The company offered 2 million more units than anticipated. It originally planned to offer 22 million units before lowering the offering in November. Each unit consists of one share of common stock and one-half of a warrant, exercisable at $11.50.


BioPlus Acquisition is led by Chairman and CBO Jonathan Rigby, the Group CEO of autoimmune and allergy biotech Revolo Biotherapeutics, and CEO, CFO, and Director Ross Haghighat, the Founding Partner of Jasper Capital Partners and Chairman of Triton Systems. The company aims to leverage management's experience to target the life sciences industry.

BioPlus Acquisition plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol BIOSU. Cantor Fitzgerald acted as sole bookrunner on the deal.