With no vaccine to show for more than 20 years of work, the HIV-vaccine community is being forced to radically change the way it works. Funding organizations are insisting on a 'big science' approach involving huge data-sharing collaborations. But AIDS researchers are divided over whether such a strategy will really speed progress towards a vaccine.

When the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced a US$300-million call for proposals in HIV vaccine research last year, it marked a key change for researchers used to chasing investigator-driven grants. Individual groups need not apply, said the foundation. Instead, it demanded that research groups organize themselves into bigger consortia, then jointly submit large, multimillion-dollar proposals with clear milestones and goals. The consortia had to agree to share data with each other, and to ensure that any patents won would allow vaccines to be made available to developing countries at low cost.

Researchers duly did as they were asked, and last month the Gates Foundation announced the winners of 16 grants, totalling $287 million over five years. They will establish an international network of 11 vaccine-discovery consortia, plus 5 support and data-analysis facilities — bringing together 165 investigators from 19 countries in a single effort (see 'Some of the winners...').

The move comes a year after the US National Institutes of Health put some $315 million over 7 years into a similar group of consortia to create the Center for HIV-AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI).

A clutch of consortia will receive US$287 million in an attempt to alleviate the plight of AIDS sufferers. Credit: J. DELAY/AP

The idea of large consortia working on AIDS vaccine research was put forward in 2003 by a group of research funders. It was outlined earlier this year by the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise, a virtual consortium aimed at accelerating HIV vaccine development that was endorsed by the G8 summit in July.

Instead of relying on researchers to form collaborations spontaneously, those with the money are now forcing it to happen, says Michel Kazatchkine, France's ambassador for AIDS and co-chair of the Enterprise coordination committee. Kazatchkine explains that instead of gathering and publishing their own data, researchers will be obliged to work with large, shared data sets, use standardized assays and methods, and farm out routine analyses to a series of centralized laboratories.

Much of this isn't controversial. Most AIDS scientists agree that standardized methods are sorely needed, and there is broad support for the $100 million that the Gates Foundation is providing for five central facilities to help structure and coordinate the field. At present, groups use different cohorts, assays and surrogate markers. This makes it all but impossible to compare results to find the most promising vaccine candidates for clinical trials. Individual researchers have little incentive to improve matters, as developing standards involves mundane work that does not yield prestigious publications.

Not everyone agrees with Bill Gates' idea of a mission-oriented approach to vaccine discovery. Credit: N. ROBERTS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

More contentious are the 11 research grants to establish vaccine-discovery consortia — these are likely to be the talk of the corridors at next week's XVI International Aids Conference in Toronto, Canada. There are concerns about both the selection process (see 'A controversial choice?') and the wisdom of investing so much money in a big-science approach.

“We are having to learn a new culture and language relating to these milestones and directed research,” says Robin Weiss of University College London, UK, who has won a $25.3-million grant. His consortium involves 11 labs in at least 6 countries. Getting them to work together effectively will be an organizational challenge, Weiss says, although he adds that they already “feel like a family”. But Weiss is one of several AIDS researchers who argue that the community already cooperates well. “I was a little surprised at the implication that we needed the Gates Foundation to tell us to collaborate,” he says.

Many researchers are concerned about the level of funding going to a mission-oriented approach versus investigator-driven science. “It's a difficult balance to get in vaccine discovery — it's not development, but research,” says Weiss. “I don't think an AIDS vaccine has been held up because we didn't know how to collaborate. The limiting factor is a scientific breakthrough, a bright idea and new thinking.”

Others argue that large mission-oriented grants could hold back the science. “You are going to get bad decisions,” predicts one AIDS researcher who requested anonymity. He argues that the approach hands scientific choices to bureaucrats, and that the concentration of so much money in so few hands is a recipe for turf wars and nepotism — a criticism vocally expressed by US researchers left out of the CHAVI funding framework. He also questions whether large collaborations — which make sense in astronomy, where teams often study the same object at different wavelengths, or in tackling the vast amounts of data coming from the Human Genome Project — are as applicable to the experiments of vaccine research.

The task of making big science work for HIV falls to Adel Mahmoud, who will retire next month as president of Merck's Vaccine Division to become chief executive of the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise.

Kazatchkine for one is a convert, arguing that the “incredible egotism” of individuals and institutions often creates communities that lack the vision to organize themselves productively: “If Mahmoud succeeds, he will demonstrate a new way of doing science, where collaboration becomes as important as competition, giving research a new image.”