Immunogenicity, Efficacy and Twelve-Month Storage Stability Studies of a Lyophilized Rabies mRNA Vaccine
Chen Chen, Dandan Ling, Kai Ji, Liang Tang, Xiaojing Zhang, Xishan Lu, Xuemei Leng, Changyao Tan, Hongchao Wu, Wenqiang Pang, Quanren He, Jerry Zhang, Peng Gao, Xiaotao Wang, Linhui Wang, Bo Ying

TL;DR
A freeze-dried rabies mRNA vaccine was developed that remains stable at refrigerated temperatures for 12 months and shows strong immune responses in mice and dogs.
Contribution
The development of a stable, lyophilized rabies mRNA vaccine with long-term storage capability at 2–8 °C.
Findings
The lyophilized vaccine showed comparable immunogenicity to its liquid form and higher immunity than inactivated vaccines.
ABO1005 provided 100% protection in dogs, outperforming the 83% protection of commercial inactivated vaccines.
The vaccine remained stable for 12 months at 2–8 °C with no significant changes in quality or immunogenicity.
Abstract
Background: Many new mRNA-based vaccine candidates in liquid mRNA-LNP formulations are under development; however, their stability limitations necessitate frozen storage, posing a significant challenge for long-term storage and transportation. Methods: In this study, an mRNA-LNP rabies vaccine, ABO1005, was prepared, freeze-dried and stored at 2–8 °C for 12-month storage stability evaluation. The immunogenicity, vaccine potency (the NIH method), and protective efficacy of ABO1005 were assessed in mice or dogs and compared to a commercialized inactivated vaccine. Results: Research conducted in mice indicated that the lyophilized vaccine exhibited comparable immunogenicity to its liquid form counterpart. Furthermore, the vaccine candidate elicited a robust humoral response lasting at least 175 days, and the specific antibody titers were not affected by the pre-administration of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRabies epidemiology and control · Virology and Viral Diseases · Virus-based gene therapy research
