This takes us much closer to an
outright protocol that counters influenza.
It at least provides a swift acting treatment that allows us to leap
ahead of an actual pandemic and stop it in its tracks. Where it to be effective only for a brief time
that is good enough to stop the problem.
As stated, true immunity may never be attainable or at least it is a
long ways away.
This certainly will be an
excellent stopgap that protects the most.
Fear of influenza has driven the
industry for decades. The cause of that
fear, though rarely encountered is very real.
A pandemic will kill the strong and healthy. SARS was a close encounter a few years
ago. In that case the ball was not
dropped.
It would be nice to see influenza
sufficiently suppressed that we rarely think about it at all.
Discovery of natural antibody offers hope for a near-universal flu
vaccine
By Darren
Quick
01:49 July 11, 2011
Colorized negative stained transmission electron micrograph (TEM)
depicting some of the ultrastructural morphology of the A/CA/4/09 swine flu
virus
Every year in the lead up to flu season, those at high risk of
infection, such as the young, the elderly and those who are immune-compromised,
head off to the doctor for a jab in the hopes it will protect them from the
flu. However, influenza vaccines have a number of shortcomings that means even
those who have been vaccinated may still get influenza. Researchers at the
Scripps Research Institute and Dutch biopharmaceutical company Crucell have now
found a broadly acting antibody that could lead to a single, near-universal flu
vaccine to replace annually changing vaccines.
The high mutation rate of the influenza virus means that any particular
influenza vaccine will usually grant protection for a few years at most. So
every year, the World Health Organization predicts which strains of the virus
are most likely to be circulating in the next year, allowing pharmaceutical
companies to develop vaccines that will provide the best immunity against these
strains. But with the large number of strains and the fact it takes
pharmaceutical manufacturers six months to formulate and produce the millions
of doses required, a new or overlooked strain can become prominent in the
interim, meaning that even those who have been vaccinated may become infected.
Overcoming basic flu-virus defense mechanism
Attempts to create a vaccine that works against a wide set of strains
and therefore provides protection against unforeseen strains have encountered
difficulties relating to the structures that hold the virus itself. These
spherical or filamentous envelopes are studded with mushroom-shaped
hemagglutinin (HA) proteins, whose more accessible outer structures effectively
serve as decoys for a normal antibody response.
"The outer loops on the HA head seem to draw most of the
antibodies, but in a given strain these loops can mutate to evade an antibody
response within months," said Ian Wilson, who is the Hansen Professor of
Structural Biology and a member of the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology at
Scripps Research.
This means that antiviral drugs aimed at these and other viral targets
will also lose effectiveness as flu populations evolve. The researchers
therefore sought to find and attack structures on flu viruses that are
relatively unvarying and functionally important.
After sifting through the blood of people who had been immunized with
flu vaccines, Crucell's Jaap Goudsmit discovered an antibody called CR6261
that bound to one such vulnerable structure. In mice, Goudsmit's team found
that an injection of CR6261 could prevent or cure an otherwise-lethal infection
by about half of flu viruses. These included H1 viruses such as H1N1, strains
of which were responsible for the 1918 Spanish Flu and 2009 Swine Flu global
pandemics.
The Crucell researchers approached Wilson , whose team determined the
three-dimensional molecular structure of CR6261 and its binding site on HA,
which was reported in Science in 2009. That binding site, or
"epitope," turned out to be on HA's lower, less-accessible stalk portion
and the binding of CR6261 to that region apparently interferes with flu
viruses' ability to deliver their genetic material into host cells and start a
new infection.
Not good enough
Not content with that, the Crucell researchers subsequently set about
looking for an antibody that could neutralize all of the remaining flu viruses
unaffected by CR6261. They recently found success with one called CR8020,
which they say powerfully neutralizes a range of human-affecting flu viruses,
including H3 and H7 subtypes, in lab-dish tests and in mice.
Utilizing the same technique used with CR6261, the researchers were
able to determine the antibody's structure and its precise epitope on the viral
HA protein.
"It's even lower on the HA stalk than the CR6261 epitope; in fact
it's closer to the viral envelope than any other influenza antibody epitope
we've ever seen," said Damian Ekiert, a graduate student in the Scripps
Research Kellogg School of Science and Technology who is working in the Wilson
laboratory.
Crucell is about to begin tests of the CR6261 antibody in human
volunteers and expects to eventually begin similar trials of CR8020. If those
trials succeed, aside from a vaccine the two antibodies could be combined and
used in a "passive immunotherapy" approach.
"This would mainly be useful as a fast-acting therapy against
epidemic or pandemic influenza viruses," said Wilson . "The ultimate goal is an active
vaccine that elicits a robust, long-term antibody response against those
vulnerable epitopes; but developing that is going to be a challenging
task."
The Scripps
Research and Crucell team's
paper, "A Highly Conserved Neutralizing Epitope on Group 2 Influenza A
Viruses," is published in the journal Science Express
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