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GeoVax Partners With ABL to Advance cGMP Production of Vaccine Candidates
ATLANTA, GA, May 31, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire – GeoVax Labs, Inc. (Nasdaq: GOVX), a biotechnology company developing immunotherapies and

About this update from Geovax Labs, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"ATLANTA, GA, May 31, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NewMediaWire – GeoVax Labs, Inc. (Nasdaq: GOVX), a biotechnology company developing immunotherapies and vaccines against cancers and infectious diseases, today announced it has executed a Master Services Agreement (MSA) with Advanced Bioscience Laboratories, Inc. (ABL) to support current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) production of the company’s vaccine candidates, including GEO-MVA and GEO-CM04S1. ABL, a subsidiary of Institut Mérieux, is a pure-play contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) specialized in development and manufacturing of gene therapies, oncolytic viruses and vaccine candidates. With cGMP facilities located in the U.S. and Europe, ABL is well-positioned to support GeoVax’s global development programs. David Dodd, GeoVax’s Chairman and CEO, commented “In choosing to collaborate with ABL to support the cGMP manufacturing of our multiple vaccine candidates, we have selected a partner with a strong technical and regulatory track record in process development, scale-up and GMP manufacturing of oncolytic and immunotherapeutic viral vectors. We believe ABL, as a manufacturing partner, is highly capable of assisting us in advancing our innovative product candidates, including GEO-CM04S1 and GEO-MVA, through late-stage development and towards eventual commercialization.” About GEO-CM04S1 GEO-CM04S1 is a next-generation COVID-19 vaccine based on GeoVax’s MVA viral vector platform, which supports the presentation of multiple vaccine antigens to the immune system in a single dose. CM04S1 presents both the spike and nucleocapsid antigens of SARS-CoV-2 and is specifically designed to induce both antibody and T cell responses to non-variable parts of the virus. The more broadly specific and functional engagement of the immune system is designed to protect against the new and continually emerging variants of COVID-19. Based on data from animal models and a completed Phase 1 clinical study, vaccine-induced immune responses were shown to recognize both early and later variants of SARS-CoV-2, including the Omicron variant. Vaccines of this format should not require repeated modification and updating. A recent presentation of unpublished data from the open-label portion of the Phase 2 trial of CM04S1 (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04977024) in patients und...