Dan M. Granoff

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Dan M. Granoff
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Born (1944-01-22) January 22, 1944 (age 80)
New York City, NY
Alma materJohns Hopkins University
Occupation
  • Physician
  • Scientist

Dan M. Granoff (born January 22, 1944) is an infectious disease physician-scientist who was named the 2014 Maurice Hilleman/Merck Laureate by the American Society for Microbiology for outstanding contributions to vaccine discovery and development.[1] Beginning in 2011, Granoff held the Clorox Foundation Endowed Chair and was director of the Center of Immunobiology and Vaccine Development at Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (now known as University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Benioff Children's Hospital Oakland. He is the author or co-author of more than 225 research articles published in peer-reviewed journals. His work increased understanding of basic mechanisms of human immunity to encapsulated bacteria, and furthered development of vaccines against Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib) and Neisseria meningitidis (also called the meningococcus).[2][3][4]

Personal life

Granoff was born in 1944 in New York City, NY,[5] He divides his time between San Francisco, California, and Carmel Valley, California, with his partner, Marjory A Kaplan,[6] a retired lawyer. He was married to Alice Baghdassarian Granoff, M.D.,[7] and divorced in 1985. They have two sons.

Education

Granoff completed his bachelors and medical degrees at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore Maryland. He completed pediatric residency training at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, followed by a post-doctoral fellowship in pediatric infectious diseases at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital (now MetroHealth Medical Center).

Research

Described below are some of Granoff’s most important research contributions.

Development of Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) polysaccharide and polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccines

In 1987, the first Hib conjugate vaccine, which used Hib capsular polysaccharide (called PRP) conjugated to diphtheria toxoid as the carrier protein, was licensed in the United States and recommended for the age group 18 to 60 months. Granoff and colleagues were the first to test this vaccine in humans, and in subsequent studies they demonstrated that the vaccine, called PRP-D, not only decreased Hib disease in vaccinated children but also in children in the age goup <18 months, which at the time was not being vaccinated. This study was one of the first to suggest that introduction of a polysaccharide conjugate vaccine could lead to "herd immunity", now also called “community protection”).

Granoff and his colleagues also demonstrated an unexpected decrease in the presence of Hib in the noses and throats of healthy children who had been immunized with PRP-D, when compared to unvaccinated children or children who had been vaccinated with an earlier Hib vaccine containing only unconjugated polysaccharide. This finding provided a basis for the observed community protection against Hib disease associated with PRP-D vaccination.

Insights into the basis of human anticapsular immunity

In 1986 Granoff and his colleagues reported that a single injection of a modified Hib conjugate vaccine that used an outer membrane complex as is carrier protein, elicited a protective antibody response in two month-old infants. Granoff’s findings proved that B cells, with the appropriate rearranged genes, were present at age two months and were activated by a single injection of this Hib polysaccharide conjugate vaccine. This result was unexpected since scientists at the time believed that two-month-olds did not have mature B cells capable of responding to polysaccharide antigens.

With Dr. Alexander H. Lucas, Granoff used idiotype analysis to investigate variable region gene diversity in human antibodies for Hib polysaccharide.They found dramatic changes in gene utilization by age of vaccination, and different Hib vaccine types. Collectively these studies contributed to making anti-Hib capsular antibodies one of the best understood human antibody systems at a molecular level.

A meningococcal serogroup A conjugate vaccine for Sub-Saharan Africa

For much of the 20th century, Sub-Saharan Africa experienced large epidemics of meningococcal disease caused by serogroup A strains.By the mid-1990s, three vaccine manufacturers were developing meningococcal conjugate vaccines against serogroup C strains in response to public health concerns in the United Kingdom of approximately 10,000 cases and 1000 deaths during the previous decade. However, because of poor prospects for a profit, there was little interest by manufacturers to develop a serogroup group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine for Sub-Saharan Africa where, during the same time period, there were more than 700,000 cases and 100,000 deaths. In 1999, Granoff and his colleagues at the World Health Organization, proposed developing and manufacturing a low cost, meningococcal vaccine for Africa using a public–private partnership.[8] With funding by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and under the leadership of Dr. Marc LaForce, a low cost, vaccine, called MenAfriVac, was developed and introduced in Sub-Saharan Africa 2010. By 2015, more than 150 million people had been immunized. The vaccine has been highly effective in preventing group A epidemics and helped establish herd immunity.

Meningococcal vaccines

Collaborating with Sanjay Ram's Laboratory, then at Boston University School of Medicine, Granoff and colleagues found that a meningococcal lipoproteinis critical for the ability of the bacteria to survive in human serum. The protein bound human complement factor H (FH), which down-regulates complement activation. The lipoprotein, which had been previously identified as a vaccine antigen of unknown function by two groups, had been designated GNA1870 or Lp2086. To reflect its function, Granoff and Ram renamed the liporprotein “Factor H binding protein” or “FHbp” FHbp is now the main or sole antigen in the two meningococcal serogroup B vaccines licensed in the U.S., Europe and in other areas of the world. In immunized humans, however, the FHbp antigen forms a complex with human FH. With Drs. Peter Beernink and Sanjay Ram, Granoff showed that FH binding to FHbp decreased protective antibody responses. Beernink and Granoff went on to create mutant FHbp vaccines with amino acid substitutions that decreased FH binding, which elicited greater protective antibody responses.They showed that currently licensed FHbp-based meningococcal B vaccines can be improved by introducing these amno acid substitutions. Granoff and his colleagues also investigated over-expressing FHbp in meningococcal native outer membrane vesicles (NOMV) prepared from mutant meningococcal strains. The meningococcal NOMV vaccine combined with over-expressing mutant low FH-binding FHbp elicited much higher and broader protective antibody responses than control vaccines, including a currently licensed one.

Publications

Granoff authored or co-authored more than 225 research articles in peer-reviewed journals, review articles, and multiple textbook chapters including recent chapters on Meningococcal vaccines published in the 7th and 8th editions of Plotkin’s Vaccines. Granoff also co-edited a textbook on Hib vaccines with Dr. Ronald D Ellis.

Academic and Business career Granoff served as Director of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Washington University School of Medicine and St. Louis Children’s Hospital from 1979 to 1993[5]. In 1993, he became Executive Director of Clinical Vaccine Research at Chiron Corporation (Emeryville CA) with a joint appointment as a Scientist at Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute (Currently UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital)]. His team at Chiron was responsible for clinical development of the first adjuvanted influenza vaccine, and a meningococcal serogroup C conjugate vaccine, which was used to control deadly outbreaks in the United Kingdom. In 1995 Granoff became Vice President of Scientific Affairs. He left Chiron in 1998 to become a Senior Scientist at Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute.

Editorship

Granoff served as associate editor of the journal, Pediatric Research from 1982 to 1988[9] and is a member of the editorial boards of Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics[10] and the journal Vaccine.[11] He is a member on the editorial advisory board of the journal, Clinical Infectious Diseases.[12]

Recognition by scientific societies

The American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI): Elected to membership in 1987[13] The American Academy of Microbiology: Elected as a Fellow in 2010[14] The Infectious Diseases Society of America and the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society: Elected as a Fellow to both organizations.

Awards

  • 1981 Alpha Omega Alpha Faculty honoree[15] at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis MO
  • 2010 Stanley A. Plotkin Awardee in Vaccinology, the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society[16] Granoff received this award for significant contributions to the field of “vaccinology.”
  • 2014 Maurice Hilleman/Merck Laureate, the American Society of Microbiology Granoff received this award for outstanding contributions to vaccine discovery and development.
  • 2017 Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Distinguished Medical Alumnus Award[17]

Patents

Granoff is inventor or co-inventor on multiple US and international patents including Patent Nos. US6,936,261; US8,968,748; US9,034,345; US9,439,957; US10,857,221; and US10,905,754 and others.

References

  1. "Past ASM Awardees" (PDF). American Society of Microbiology.
  2. Stephens, David S; Greenwood, Brian; Brandtzaeg, Petter (June 30, 2007). "Epidemic meningitis, meningococcaemia, and Neisseria meningitidis". The Lancet. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61016-2.
  3. Orenstein, Walter A.; Offit, Paul A.; Edwards, Kathryn M.; Plotkin, Stanley A. Plotkin's Vaccines. ISBN 9780323790581.
  4. "Current Epidemiology and Trends in Invasive Haemophilus influenzae Disease-United States, 2009-2015". Clinical Infectious Diseases. PMID 29509834.
  5. Granoff, Dan M. "Portrait: coincidences, convergences and opportunities". Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics. PMID 23807081.
  6. "Marjory Ann Kaplan". All California Attorneys.
  7. "Alice Granoff Obituary - Tucson, AZ". Dignity Memorial.
  8. "Fighting a Third World Menace". March 24, 2004.
  9. "Pediatric Research". Nature. April 15, 2023.
  10. "Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics Editorial Board".
  11. "Editorial board - Vaccine | ScienceDirect.com by Elsevier". www.sciencedirect.com.
  12. "Editorial Board". Oxford Academic.
  13. "Home". The American Society for Clinical Investigation.
  14. "Search - ASM Academy Fellow Directory". myasm.asm.org.
  15. "Member Search". Alpha Omega Alpha.
  16. "Stanley A. Plotkin Award – PIDS Foundation". PIDS Foundation. Retrieved 2023-10-04.
  17. "Past Alumni Award Winners". Hopkins Medicine.

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