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  • We've all been sitting in our homes for months now, and most days we hear something

  • about how the vaccine to stop the spread of COVID-19 is just around the corner.

  • There are actually over 160 vaccines in development, but two in particular are making the most

  • headlines; one from Moderna Inc and another from University of Oxford.

  • But what makes these two so special?

  • And how close are they really to being available to you and me?

  • To summarize; There are a variety of vaccine types, and the biggest difference between

  • them is how they use the pathogen in the vaccine.

  • It can be a whole pathogen, just a piece of it or a newer method using the DNA or RNA

  • of the pathogen.

  • This new method, also known as a Nucleic Acid vaccine development, are what Moderna and University of

  • Oxford are both creating.

  • Typically, for a vaccine to go from the lab to our bodies is a process that takes anywhere

  • from seven to fifteen years.

  • But we're already seeing nucleic acid vaccines near the final stages of their development

  • in a matter of months.

  • This speediness is possible because these vaccines seem to be safer, cheaper, and easier

  • to both handle and make.

  • See, all a team needs to make this vaccine is the pathogen's genetic code, not the

  • actual virus itself.

  • So in the case of COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2's entire genome was sequenced in January 2020

  • and then uploaded to a public database for anyone to use.

  • And then, the race was on.

  • Moderna made headlines early in the pandemic because they were one of the first to take

  • this sequenced genome and combine it with their already developed mRNA technology called

  • mRNA-1273.

  • mRNA, or messenger RNA, is an instruction molecule that, well, does kind of what it

  • sounds like; it instructs a cell on how to use that genetic code.

  • So to get a lil technical, the team at Moderna isolated the part of SARS-CoV-2's genome

  • that makes the infamousspike proteinthat we see on coronaviruses.

  • Then, they implanted that genetic code into an mRNA molecule.

  • Aaand that's the vaccine candidate!

  • When injected into the human body, that vaccine will enter our cells, instructing them to

  • use the viral code, and making our own cells produce their ownspike proteins”.

  • Our immune system can then identify those spike proteins as foreign stuff and begin doing

  • what it does best to protect our body and produce antibodies to remember the infection for future protection

  • Now, the best part about this technique, remember, is that the virus isn't actually in our

  • body.

  • The vaccine is just mimicking what that would 'look' like to our immune system.

  • So this mRNA method skips the usual time-intensive development process that's required

  • when to using live-viruses in a vaccine.

  • So great, we know how it works.When will we have it?

  • Like all viable vaccines, these two promising candidates will have to pass the three major

  • phases of development.

  • With each phase of clinical trial, the amount of people the vaccine is tested on

  • increases.

  • As of July 27th, Moderna was the first U.S. vaccine candidate to enter a human clinical

  • trial with 30,000 healthy participants who are athigh-riskof contracting COVID.

  • Many are coming from hotspot locations around the U.S. that have increased rates of infection,

  • so scientists will be able see how the virus and the vaccine candidate interact in the real

  • world.

  • But waiting for that data to come back in and be processed will take a while, and it makes

  • it a bit harder to get a reliable timeline on when we'll finally get a vaccine for

  • widespread use.

  • In Moderna's case, they're aiming to have preliminary data by the end of year, and they're

  • hoping to have their vaccine available sometime in 2021.

  • Their manufacturing partner, a Swiss company named Lonza, plans on helping Moderna create

  • up to one billion doses.

  • That is, if it's approved. And as far as the race goes, University of Oxford is not too

  • far behind them.

  • Instead of an mRNA molecule, University of Oxford is using a weakened and modified version

  • of a chimpanzee adenovirus vaccine vector.

  • That's basically a harmless virus that causes colds in chimps.

  • Their vaccine is called the (ChAdOx1 nCoV-19) or AZD1222 and it also uses the genetic code for

  • the coronavirusspike protein”.But instead of placing it inside an mRNA molecule, the

  • team placed these instructions inside the adenovirus.

  • This induces a similar immune response to protect the body from future infections.

  • What makes ChAdOx1 so promising is that this method has been used before on another coronavirus

  • called MERS, of which there was an outbreak in 2012 . And unlike mRNA technology, the

  • Chimpanzee adenovirus itself has already been studied for a number of years, and has already

  • been genetically altered so that it's impossible for it to grow in humans.

  • That means it's safe to give to children, the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions

  • like diabetes.

  • Oxford's vaccine is already entering the final stages of their trial, which includes

  • thousands of participants.

  • The team estimates “a couple of monthsfor their data to come in, but again, the

  • timeline is uncertain.

  • But if everything goes to plan, the Australian government has already signed a letter of

  • intent with distribution company AstraZeneca to secure 25 million doses of the vaccine.

  • Because money is what's really pushing these vaccines through the door.

  • The U.S.'s action plan, calledOperation Warp Speed”, is investing in both these

  • candidates heavily, with almost $2.5 billion going to Moderna and $1.2 billion to AstraZeneca

  • and University of Oxford.

  • This is in order to reach Operation Warp Speed's goal to distribute 300 million doses by January

  • 2021.

  • That's an aggressive timeline that many doubt is even feasible.

  • Not only would this be the fastest vaccine ever created, but also the first ever approved

  • nucleic acid vaccine.

  • So as of right now, our best hopes are that either Moderna or Oxford's vaccines will

  • prove to be safe, and effective, and that one or both will be available and affordable

  • for me and you.

  • In terms of when this will all happen, the best we can optimistically say is maybesometime

  • in 2021”.

  • So until then, practice social distancing, wash your hands, wear your mask, and stay

  • safe . For you and those you love.

We've all been sitting in our homes for months now, and most days we hear something

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