Science & technology | Stabilising mRNA vaccines

Vaccines based on mRNA need to get out of the freezer

Two new ideas might make that happen

An employee opens an ultra low temperature freezer at a cold room of the Bexen Medical company facilities in the Spanish Basque city of Hernani, on November 18, 2020, where the Basque Country will store the vaccine for COVID-19 by Pfizer pharmaceutical laboratory after its expected arrival on December 26, 2020. - The share of Spaniards willing to take a Covid-19 vaccine grew to 40.5 percent this month, from 36.8 percent in November, a new poll showed just days before Spain begins its inocualation programme. Spain will receive the first doses of vaccine on December 26, one day before to start immunising people against the coronavirus, starting with elderly residents and staff in nursing homes. (Photo by ANDER GILLENEA / AFP) (Photo by ANDER GILLENEA/AFP via Getty Images)
Goodbye to all thatImage: Getty Images

The first successful attempt to transport vaccines over long distances was crude, but ingenious. In 1803, seven years after Edward Jenner’s demonstration that inoculations of the lymph from cowpox pustules could protect against smallpox, a group of 22 orphan boys embarked in La Coruña on a ship bound for Spain’s American colonies. Two had been deliberately infected with cowpox. When they developed pustules Francisco Xavier de Balmis y Berenguer, the doctor who had organised the expedition, used the lymph therein to inoculate two more. And so on, until the ship arrived a little over two months later and inoculations could be given to locals.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Warming to their task”

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