Monash University welcomes $50m Government funding for mRNA vaccine development and manufacturing
The Victorian Government’s $50 million investment in mRNA vaccine manufacturing is welcome recognition of the world-class capability of Monash University specialists and the important role they are playing in the fight against COVID-19.
Acting Premier James Merlino and Minister for Health Martin Foley announced the funding at Monash Health to invest in critical medical manufacturing technology and research over two years as part of the Victorian State Budget 21/22.
Monash University’s world-leading experts will work with the Victorian Government, the University of Melbourne and research institutes including The Doherty Institute to establish and scale mRNA vaccine manufacturing in Victoria.
The Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences (MIPS), which is ranked #2 in the world (Oxford is #1; Harvard is #3), is an Australian leader in mRNA technology.
In 2020 a team of Monash University researchers, led by Professor Colin Pouton, developed Australia’s first COVID-19 mRNA vaccine candidates and, in collaboration with The Doherty Institute, received Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) funding to develop the vaccine. Further MRFF funding was granted to conduct a Phase 1 clinical trial.
Monash University Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Senior Vice-President (Enterprise and Governance), Professor Ken Sloan, said today’s investment will harness the existing world-class capability of Monash and other Victorian partners to support significant, scaled domestic mRNA vaccine production.
“Monash University brings together mRNA specialists from the fields of biotechnology, infectious disease, immunity and cancer, at the leading edge of a new era in novel mRNA therapeutics,” he said.
“The University is well positioned to support this national imperative through our deep knowledge of and connection with the pharmaceutical industry, and the proven know-how to take products through formulation and clinical development for optimised manufacturing.”
Professor Pouton has been advocating for Australia to have its own platform for a quick response to emerging viruses, and says that mRNA vaccination is the fastest way to go.
“We are very keen to push ahead with the second generation COVID-19 vaccine we are working on, and looking to the future, we’re collaborating with a number of researchers who are interested in how the mRNA platform could be used for other medical applications,” Professor Pouton said.
“This funding presents an opportunity for Monash University to help build an Australian mRNA ecosystem and a range of new therapeutic products.”
Experts from Monash University’s Biomedicine Discovery Institute will also work on the project, including mRNA specialists from the fields of biotechnology, infectious disease, immunity and cancer.
The investment follows the success of the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, which have been proven to be highly effective.
The proven scalability and comparative low-cost vaccine manufacturing potential of mRNA vaccines and nanomedicines secures them as the critical technology platform for vaccines and medicines of the future.
Increasingly, mRNA nanomedicine can also be used in the treatment of cancer, rare diseases, cellular engineering and protein-replacement therapy, so this investment will help accelerate mRNA projects and develop new treatments to save lives.