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| DBT and the IAVI Forge Partnership to Develop
Next Generation Vaccine Candidates | |
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The Department of Biotechnology(DBT), Ministry of Science
& Technology, Government of India and the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative
signed an agreement today to address a major obstacle in AIDS vaccine development:
the design of candidate vaccines to elicit neutralizing antibodies against HIV.
A new Indian Medicinal Chemistry Programme, co-sponsored and co-funded by IAVI
and the Department of Biotechnology, will comprise top Indian and U.S. scientists
tasked with accelerating the pace of AIDS vaccine discovery and developing creative
concepts for the next generation of AIDS vaccines. Union Minister for Science
and Technology and Earth Sciences Shri. Kapil Sibal said that vaccine research
is so critical that the Health Ministry and the Science and Technology Ministry
have joined hands to provide the effort the support it needs. Indias
Department of Biotechnology is delighted to be a part of the global search for
an efficacious AIDS vaccine. This was stated by Dr. Maharaj K. Bhan, Secretary,
DBT. He said only through these kinds of biotechnology ventures involving international
collaborations and the sharing of scientific knowledge, can we hope to solve the
complex biomedical problems of our times. According to Seth Berkley, CEO
and President of IAVI, this new partnership will broaden ongoing efforts in India
to find an AIDS vaccine. The Indian Programme will complement the work
of IAVIs Neutralizing Antibody Consortium (NAC), a team of internationally
recognized scientists working on the neutralizing antibody challenge. Researchers
believe an ideal AIDS vaccine must evoke an antibody response that can block HIV
from entering healthy cells, as well as reduce the amount of viral dissemination
through a cell-mediated immune response to HIV-infected cells. Yet today, virtually
all current vaccine candidates in the pipeline are based on cell-mediated immune
responses alone, failing to target the second critical arm of the human immune
system. The first component of the DBT-IAVI Programme will consist of a
collaboration of principal investigators from different academic research laboratories
to design novel HIV antigens. The investigators include Professor Virander S.
Chauhan of the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology,
New Delhi; Professor Raghavan Varadarajan of the Indian Institute of Science,
Bangalore; Dr. Stephen Kaminsky of IAVIs AIDS Vaccine Development Laboratory,
New York; and Dr. Philip Dawson of The Scripps Research Institute, California.
IAVI and DBT may select additional principal investigators, contract researchers,
or partners in India to participate in the Programme, and will discuss ways to
build infrastructure for subsequent HIV/AIDS vaccine candidate evaluation. At
a later stage, based on their initial research and vaccine design concepts, both
partners expect to work with an Indian manufacturer to assist with high throughput
synthesis, antigen chemical characterization and potency evaluation of proposed
AIDS vaccine candidates. The Department of Biotechnology (DBT) was established
under the Indian Ministry of Science and Technology in 1986 to give impetus to
the development of the field of modern biology and biotechnology in India. Significant
achievements include the growth and application of biotechnology in the broad
areas of medical biotechnology and health care, agriculture, animal sciences,
environment, and industry. DBT has more than 5000 research publications, 4000
post-doctoral students, several technologies transferred to industries and patents
(including US patents) to its credit. Initiatives have been taken to promote transgenic
research in plants with emphasis on pest and disease resistance, nutritional quality,
silk-worm genome analysis, molecular biology of human genetic disorders, brain
research, plant genome research, development, validation and commercialisation
of diagnostic kits and vaccines for communicable diseases, food biotechnology,
biodiversity conservation and bioprospecting, setting up of micropropagation parks
and biotechnology based development for SC/ST, rural areas, women and for different
States. Necessary guidelines for transgenic plants, recombinant vaccines and drugs
have also been evolved. A strong base of indigenous capabilities has been created.
For further information, refer www.dbtindia.gov.in . The International
AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI) is a global not-for-profit organization whose mission
is to ensure the development of safe, effective, accessible, preventive HIV vaccines
for use throughout the world. Founded in 1996 and operational in 24 countries,
IAVI and its network of collaborators research and develop vaccine candidates.
IAVI's financial and in-kind supporters include the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation,
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The John D. Evans Foundation, The New
York Community Trust, the James B. Pendleton Charitable Trust, The Rockefeller
Foundation, The Starr Foundation, The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation; the
Governments of Canada, Denmark, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, the
United Kingdom, and the United States, the Basque Autonomous Government as well
as the European Union; multilateral organizations such as The World Bank; corporate
donors including BD (Becton, Dickinson & Co.), Continental Airlines, Google
Inc., Merck & Co., Inc. and Pfizer Inc; leading AIDS charities such as Broadway
Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and Until There's A Cure Foundation; other private donors
such as The Haas Trusts; and many generous individuals from around the world.
For more information, see www.iavi.org Source
: Press Information Bureau Date :
May 02, 2007 |