U of O scientist seeking edible vaccine for COVID-19 - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 08:41 PM | Calgary | -7.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

U of O scientist seeking edible vaccine for COVID-19

University of Ottawa professor and plant biologist Allyson MacLean has been busy during the pandemic creating a unique vaccine for COVID-19 one you can eat.

Plant biologist injecting tiny amounts of virus into tomato, potato, lettuce leaves

Ottawa professor hoping for an edible COVID-19 vaccine

4 years ago
Duration 0:45
University of Ottawa plant biologist Allyson MacLean demonstrates the process for injecting edible plants with bacterial solution, which will hopefully cause the leaves to gradually produce a vaccine for COVID-19.

Eating your veggies isn't only good for youitmay someday protect you against COVID-19.

That'sthe hope of a plant biologist at the University of Ottawa who's working to create an edible vaccine for the novel coronavirus.

Allyson MacLean's research involves injecting tomato, potatoand lettuce plants with a tiny particleof viral DNA swimming in a bacterial solution.

"We take a syringe that does not have a needle point. You press it up against the large leaf and you basically push the bacteria into the plant tissues," said MacLean, 41, an assistant professor of plant biology.

The bacteria piggyback that DNA into the plant, which triggers the production of viral proteins. Eating the plant allows these proteins to pass through the digestive system, where they're taken up by special cells in the gut, stimulating a type of immunity.

It's called"mucosal immunity,"and it's of particular interest to the scientists currently joined in battle withCOVID-19 because the virus that causes the disease, SARS-CoV-2, enters the body via the mucosal surface of the respiratory system.

Rooted in nature

MacLean has spent a decade researching symbiosis in nature, specifically how microbes and plants co-exist. One of the most common microbes is Agrobacterium tumefaciens, whichlivesin soil and naturally latches onto plants.

"It finds a wound in the plantand it gets in there. It takes part of its DNA and injects it into a plant cell. It basically makes the plant cells grow tumours that the bacteria can then use as a foodsource," MacLeanexplained.

"People realized a few decades ago that thiswas going on in nature," she said. "Somebody had the brilliant idea:OK, can we harness this as a way of making genetically modified organisms?"

In her current research to create an edible vaccine for COVID-19, MacLean is using "parts of the virus that other researchers believe will elicit a strong protective antibody response." They're catching a ride into the plant tissue on the backof her old friendAgrobacterium.

The research involves tomato, potato and lettuce leaves, but the technique is being tested on this plant, Nicotiana benthamiana, a close relative to tobacco. (Monique Power)

At this point in the research, MacLean is using a close relative of tobacco to determine the best way to make a plant express theviral proteins. Next stop,lettuce.

The pandemic hasn't made MacLean's research easy.When COVID-19 struck in March, she struggled to move her hands-on laboratory course online, and began alternatingwork days with her husbandso they could care for their two children, agesone and four.

"It was having to simultaneously balance unprecedented challenges in terms of research, in terms of teachingand in terms of myself as a parent," MacLeansaid. "It was really hard."

She was especially worried about her "precious transgenic mutant plants" that were left behind in the lab when the U of O campus was shut down due to COVID-19.

MacLean had to get special permission to continue tending the 'precious' plants in her U of O laboratory during the pandemic. (Monique Power)

"You can't just stop caring for them or you will lose them," said MacLean, who arranged permission to feed and fertilize the plantsthree times a week.

MacLeanhad an early fascination with biology and ecology. As a child, she set up a dragon fly hospital in her bedroom, catching flies for her patients'dinner. She harboured a garter snake in her closet one winter. She remembers dabbinga drop of liquid paper on toads in her backyardto see if she could trace their movements.

"I always very much loved living organisms. They just got smaller," she said.

Allyson MacLean, seen here at age three with her pet caterpillar perched on her shoulder, showed an early interest in ecology and biology. (Submitted by Allyson MacLean)

There are a few conventional COVID-19 vaccines already at thehuman trial stage, but "it's premature to stop exploring other avenues," said MacLean especially if the outcome is a more efficient route to global immunity.

"Plant-based vaccines are better for the developing world. They're cheaper to produce. They don't need to be refrigerated for long periods of time."

Plus, she believes people would rather eat their medicine than get a shot.

"People are more willing to ingest a vaccine than they are to get a needle."

John Bell, a senior scientist at The Ottawa Hospital and professor at the University of Ottawa, is working with MacLean on the animal testing portion of her research. (The Ottawa Hospital)

MacLean's work will be tested on mice in collaboration with John Bell of the Ottawa Health Research Institute.

"This project is pairing up a cancer researcher who uses viruses to tackle cancer and a plant biologist who normally studies the way microorganisms interact with plants,"MacLeansaid. "We're both stretching out of our comfort zones."

Add some good to your morning and evening.

More than the headlines. Subscribe to You Otta Know, the CBC Ottawa weekly newsletter.

...

The next issue of You Otta Know will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.