Early progress in antibody protection from deadly flu

Posted: May 29, 2013 at 5:46 pm

Studies on lab animals have shown early success in a type of gene therapy that may prevent the spread of pandemic flu, including historic lethal strains from 1918 and 2009, researchers said Wednesday.

The method developed at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine delivered a broadly neutralizing flu antibody into the nasal passages of ferrets and mice, protecting them against potentially lethal flu.

The research is still in its initial stages, but could offer a new tool against influenza infections which kill 500,000 people globally each year, scientists said.

A single dose appeared to protect mice for as long as nine months against a range of flu strains, including three strains of H5N1, a deadly bird flu, and and two strains of H1N1, known widely as the "swine flu" that emerged in 2009.

Typically, influenza viruses evolve so rapidly that a new vaccine is created each year, offering only limited protection against the flu which can be lethal particularly in the elderly and those with weak immune systems.

The research published in the journal Science Translational Medicine did not experiment with the latest form of bird flu to emerge from China, H7N9, which has killed 37 of the 132 people infected since March.

According to a separate study in The Lancet on Tuesday, some H7N9 bird flu patients have already been found to be resistant existing antivirals, likely as a result of treatment with Tamiflu.

"The experiments described in our paper provide critical proof-of-concept in animals," said lead researcher James Wilson, of the department of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

"Further development of this approach for pandemic flu has taken on more urgency in light of the spreading infection in China of the lethal bird strain of H7N9 virus in humans."

Scientists cloned a gene that encodes an antibody that works against many strains of flu, then engineered cells that line the nasal passages and express a broadly neutralizing antibody that wards off flu.

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Early progress in antibody protection from deadly flu

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