Simon_Graham_1

Simon Graham

The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, United Kingdom

I am a veterinary immunologist with an interest in understanding mechanisms of protective immunity and its application to vaccine development.  My early career focussed on parasitic diseases, I developed a natural cattle model for testing vaccines against onchocerciasis, which provided the first proof-of-principle for vaccine-induced protection. I also identified and evaluated vaccine candidate antigens from the parasite Theileria parva, which were designed to induce protective bovine CD8 T cell responses. My research then focussed on porcine viruses, such as classical swine fever (CSFV) and porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRSV) viruses. I informed discussions on the use of emergency vaccination to control CSF outbreaks by demonstrating that live attenuated vaccines prevented transmission of divergent CSFV strains after only three days. My current research is largely focussed on PRRSV, and I am pursuing complimentary approaches to improved vaccine development. I am also working to develop a Nipah virus vaccine for pigs to reduce the risk this virus poses to public health, as well as the pig industries and livestock keepers, in South and Southeast Asia.
Vaccine innovations: from concept to impact

Infectious diseases of pigs cause major financial losses and threaten food security, animal welfare and public health. Vaccination is a highly cost-effective tool to help prevent, control, and even eradicate diseases. Vaccines are traditionally inactivated and live attenuated pathogen products. For some diseases these vaccine modalities are highly effective, for others, they may provide clinical benefit by reducing disease severity, but fail to effectively control pathogens, and for some diseases, such vaccines are either ineffective or pose safety concerns. This has necessitated the research and development of alternative vaccine strategies.

Swine medicine has frequently been at the forefront of developing and adopting novel vaccine concepts and technologies. Notable examples to be discussed include: (i) establishment of the differentiation of infected from vaccinated animals (DIVA) vaccine concept to enhance disease control, (ii) development of a chimeric virus vaccine that enabled emergency vaccination strategies; (iii) the licensing of the first RNA vaccine platform, which rapidly provides US  producers with vaccines to combat emerging swine influenza virus strains; and (iv) development of needle-free transdermal immunisation devices to improve animal welfare, dose efficiency and traceability.

However, significant challenges remain which require innovative approaches. I will close the lecture by introducing some of the advanced approaches being pursued to develop effective vaccines against the hypervariable porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus and safe and effective vaccines to combat the African swine fever panzootic.