<p>Two South African universities have announced that a joint venture led by a German academic has resulted in a Covid-19 vaccine with “promising" results, as it requires no cold chain storage like current vaccines.</p>.<p>The Walter Sisulu University (WSU) in the Eastern Cape Province and the North-West University (NWU) in the province with the same name said in a joint statement that preclinical trials on a new Covid-19 vaccine candidate were “well advanced and promising”.</p>.<p>The trials, which are being conducted at the Pre-Clinical Drug Development Platform at the NWU, will continue over the following weeks.</p>.<p>The DNA vaccine candidate was developed by Germany-based Prof Markus Depfenhart, who holds extraordinary appointments as a professor at both universities.</p>.<p>The statement said that DNA vaccines are relatively inexpensive and straightforward to manufacture, can be adjusted quickly to address mutations and offer a simple yet effective means of inducing broad-based immunity.</p>.<p>Another advantage is that DNA vaccines, because they are stable at ambient temperature without requiring a cold chain for storage and shipping, are ideally suited for the hot and humid conditions on the African continent.</p>.<p>“We express our special appreciation to Prof Depfenhart, who has had to lead this project from Hamburg, Germany, because of the extended Covid-travel restrictions. He has a big impact on our two universities.</p>.<p>“He is a driving force in bringing together a new Pan-African, multi-national platform around vaccines and epidemic responses in Africa, by Africa, for Africa," said Prof Awie Kotzé, executive dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at the NWU.</p>.<p>“We can no longer afford to work in isolation from one another on the continent – we need links and partnerships to grow and succeed," said Prof Rushiella Songca, vice-chancellor and principal of WSU.</p>.<p>“It is hoped that the promising results of this trial will not be limited to WSU and NWU but will carry significance for other African universities and the developing world as a whole,” said Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, the Chairperson of the WSU Council.</p>.<p>"The impact of Covid-19 has been devastating to the world. For Africa and the developing world, inequalities, poverty, and deprivation have worsened. Unequal access to the vaccine has also highlighted these global inequities.</p>.<p>“Africa, then, finds itself, perhaps once again, having to rely on its own intellectual capital to navigate its way through the global crisis,” Ngcukaitobi added.</p>.<p>The universities are expected to make available updated trial results over the next few weeks.</p>.<p>The news of the new vaccine has come as members of the G-7 countries pledged greater support in providing vaccines to countries in Africa, where the pandemic is growing rapidly.</p>
<p>Two South African universities have announced that a joint venture led by a German academic has resulted in a Covid-19 vaccine with “promising" results, as it requires no cold chain storage like current vaccines.</p>.<p>The Walter Sisulu University (WSU) in the Eastern Cape Province and the North-West University (NWU) in the province with the same name said in a joint statement that preclinical trials on a new Covid-19 vaccine candidate were “well advanced and promising”.</p>.<p>The trials, which are being conducted at the Pre-Clinical Drug Development Platform at the NWU, will continue over the following weeks.</p>.<p>The DNA vaccine candidate was developed by Germany-based Prof Markus Depfenhart, who holds extraordinary appointments as a professor at both universities.</p>.<p>The statement said that DNA vaccines are relatively inexpensive and straightforward to manufacture, can be adjusted quickly to address mutations and offer a simple yet effective means of inducing broad-based immunity.</p>.<p>Another advantage is that DNA vaccines, because they are stable at ambient temperature without requiring a cold chain for storage and shipping, are ideally suited for the hot and humid conditions on the African continent.</p>.<p>“We express our special appreciation to Prof Depfenhart, who has had to lead this project from Hamburg, Germany, because of the extended Covid-travel restrictions. He has a big impact on our two universities.</p>.<p>“He is a driving force in bringing together a new Pan-African, multi-national platform around vaccines and epidemic responses in Africa, by Africa, for Africa," said Prof Awie Kotzé, executive dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at the NWU.</p>.<p>“We can no longer afford to work in isolation from one another on the continent – we need links and partnerships to grow and succeed," said Prof Rushiella Songca, vice-chancellor and principal of WSU.</p>.<p>“It is hoped that the promising results of this trial will not be limited to WSU and NWU but will carry significance for other African universities and the developing world as a whole,” said Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi, the Chairperson of the WSU Council.</p>.<p>"The impact of Covid-19 has been devastating to the world. For Africa and the developing world, inequalities, poverty, and deprivation have worsened. Unequal access to the vaccine has also highlighted these global inequities.</p>.<p>“Africa, then, finds itself, perhaps once again, having to rely on its own intellectual capital to navigate its way through the global crisis,” Ngcukaitobi added.</p>.<p>The universities are expected to make available updated trial results over the next few weeks.</p>.<p>The news of the new vaccine has come as members of the G-7 countries pledged greater support in providing vaccines to countries in Africa, where the pandemic is growing rapidly.</p>