Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

    Source: http://www.businesswire.com/portal/s...72&newsLang=en

    Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies
    Novel Project Could Help Thwart Worldwide Influenza Threat
    April 14, 2008 05:30 PM Eastern Daylight Time

    MENLO PARK, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--An international group of American and Turkish research scientists, led by Sea Lane Biotechnologies, has created the first comprehensive monoclonal antibody libraries against avian influenza (H5N1) using samples from survivors of the 2005/2006 "bird flu" outbreak in Turkey. These antibody libraries hold the promise for developing a therapy that could stop a pandemic in its tracks and provide treatment to those infected, as well as potentially pointing the way towards the development of a universal flu vaccine. The expanded treatment and containment options offered by Sea Lane?s antibody libraries could help provide healthcare officials, researchers, and governments with unprecedented resources to combat this serious global health threat.

    ?Three global influenza pandemics have occurred within the past 100 years, each with devastating consequences,? said Richard A. Lerner, the Lita Annenberg Hazen Professor of Immunochemistry at, and President of, the Scripps Research Institute (La Jolla, CA) who collaborated with Sea Lane on the study. ?Our study holds out the hope that a new outbreak could potentially be stopped at an early stage, and that effective treatment could be available to those infected.?

    The study is being published in this week?s Early Edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Libraries Have Yielded More Than 300 Antibodies Active Against Avian Influenza

    So far, the new antibody libraries reported in the study have yielded more than 300 unique monoclonal antibodies that are active against H5N1 antigens?foreign substances that produce an immune system response. From this group, the authors identified several broadly neutralizing antibodies that were effective against a number of contemporary subtypes of H5 (avian) flu.

    Moving Towards A Universal Influenza Vaccine

    The new research reported here suggests that the antibodies recovered from the avian flu survivors may point to an exploitable weak spot in the virus, offering the tantalizing possibility that a ?universal? vaccine against all strains might be made.

    Remarkably, three of the more than 300 antibodies catalogued have been found to neutralize both the H1 (common seasonal flu) and H5 (avian) subtypes. ?The antibodies we have isolated have the potential to be used directly as therapeutic agents against multiple influenza subtypes, permitting the resolution of infection upon administration to an infected individual,? said Peter Palese, the Horace W. Goldsmith Professor & Chairman of Microbiology at The Mount Sinai School of Medicine (New York, NY), another collaborator on the project.

    ?Perhaps most importantly, these antibodies may be used to identify cross-reactive epitopes on the hemagglutinin protein of an influenza virus. Identification of such epitopes may allow the rational design of vaccines with cross-subtype neutralizing activity. Such vaccines would constitute a major advance on current technology, and would be a first step towards the design of a universal influenza vaccine,? noted Palese.

    Preventing The Worst-Case Scenario ? Another Global Influenza Pandemic

    Human infection with the avian flu virus H5N1 was first reported in 1997. Since 2003, according to the World Health Organization, more than 370 confirmed cases of human infection have been reported in 14 countries.

    While overwhelmingly confined to bird populations in Asia and Europe, the H5N1 avian flu virus has shown its ability to infect humans and has killed more than 230 people around the world. Epidemiologists remain concerned that the virus will one day mutate and be able to spread more readily between people, sparking a global pandemic. The 1918-1920 Spanish flu, which shows evidence of originating in birds, killed somewhere between 40 and 100 million people.

    The antibodies recovered from these H5N1 survivor libraries, described in the report, provide opportunities for passive immunization with monoclonal antibodies that could help future individuals infected with H5N1 successfully overcome infection. Monoclonal antibody therapy is known as passive immunotherapy because patients are treated with antibodies that were made outside of their own immune systems instead of those actively made internally.

    The potential for passive immunization against influenza has been evident since the Spanish influenza pandemic nearly a century ago, where the benefits of transfused blood reduced the risk of mortality by more than 50 percent. Additionally, the benefits of treatment with convalescent plasma have begun to be reported in instances of H5N1, while passive immunization with human and mouse monoclonal antibodies have been shown to protect animals from death, even when given after H5N1 infection.

    Offers Additional Therapeutic Potential

    ?The antibodies we recovered from Turkey have important and broad potential," said Michael Horowitz, Chief Operating Officer for Sea Lane. "They could lead the way to providing significant protection against a broad reach of influenza?perhaps as protection to first responders and those at immediate risk, and then as treatment for those infected.?

    According to Ramesh Bhatt, Vice President for Research at Sea Lane, ?The combination of the team?s innovative antibody library techniques and tremendous scientific rigor enabled the recovery of this extensive collection of antibodies from the avian flu survivors. Because of the large number of antibodies obtained, we were able to perform a detailed immunochemical analysis of these survivors' antibody solutions against avian influenza virus during an actual outbreak.?

    The resulting antibody libraries?collections of genetic antibody material?were not dependent on whether an important antibody was being produced by the body at the time of the sample collection. Instead, the scientists were able to obtain the entire immunologic history of an individual?s response, which offered a clearer picture of the relationships between antibodies and their relative effectiveness. These insights may help scientists determine prescient strategies for therapies as the virus mutates in the future.

    ?Our libraries create a roadmap for improving the efficacy and/or specificity of therapeutic influenza antibodies," Arun Kashyap, Director of Influenza and Antibody Libraries for Sea Lane said. "As a result, we might be able to engineer the best features of different antibodies into a single antibody that may not only treat contemporary strains of influenza, but also future influenza strains which normally would escape through simple mutations.?

    Innovative Research Driven by International Effort

    ?None of this research could have been accomplished without the participation of the Turkish scientists who were responsible for the processes for collection of the bone marrow and their shipment to the laboratories in the United States preserved in a way that made recovery of the antibodies possible. This shows the value of international cooperation in basic scientific research,? said Lawrence Horowitz, CEO of Sea Lane. ?Infectious diseases know no national boundaries and treatments will only be developed if the pooled efforts of all scientists are harnessed, regardless of where they happen to reside.?

    Other authors of the study, Combinatorial Antibody Libraries from Survivors of the Turkish H5N1 Avian Influenza Outbreak Reveal Virus Neutralization Strategies, include Michael A. Dillon, Ryann E. Swale, Katherine M. Wall, Kimberly J. Perry, and Aleksandr Faynboym of Sea Lane Biotechnologies; John Steel of The Mount Sinai School of Medicine; and Mahmut Ilhan and Ahmet F. Oner of Yuzuncu Yil University.

    The study was supported by Sea Lane Biotechnologies, LLC. Partial support to Peter Palese was also provided by NIH grants.

    For questions or comments, please contact Sea Lane Biotechnologies, LLC public relations at 650-325-7399 or Keith McKeown, The Scripps Research Institute, at 858-784-8134.

  • #2
    Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

    Source: http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNew...414?hub=Health

    Antibodies could lead to bird flu treatment

    Updated Mon. Apr. 14 2008 5:36 PM ET

    CTV.ca News Staff

    Scientists have developed the first library of avian influenza antibodies, which could lead to a treatment for the potentially fatal flu strain.

    American and Turkish researchers worked with Sea Lane Biotechnologies in California to procure and store over 300 antibodies that work against the avian flu (H5N1) virus. The samples were taken from survivors of Turkey's bird flu outbreak in 2005 and 2006.

    So far, the researchers have found that three of the antibodies can defuse both the H1 (common flu) and H5 (avian) subtypes.

    The hope is that these antibodies will help scientists find a weak link in the virus, whereby a treatment, and then a vaccine, could be developed.

    "The antibodies we have isolated have the potential to be used directly as therapeutic agents against multiple influenza subtypes, permitting the resolution of infection upon administration to an infected individual," study collaborator Peter Palese, professor and chairman of microbiology at The Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said in a statement.

    Richard A. Lerner, professor of immunochemistry and president of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Ca., added: "Three global influenza pandemics have occurred within the past 100 years, each with devastating consequences."

    "Our study holds out the hope that a new outbreak could potentially be stopped at an early stage, and that effective treatment could be available to those infected."

    Avian influenza has largely been confined to bird populations since it first appeared in 1997. However, because birds have been able to transmit the virus to humans, the fear is that the virus will mutate and infect people more easily, leading to a global pandemic.

    The research will be published in the early edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Abstract:

    The widespread incidence of H5N1 influenza viruses in bird populations poses risks to human health. Although the virus has not yet adapted for facile transmission between humans, it can cause severe disease and often death. Here we report the generation of combinatorial antibody libraries from the bone marrow of five survivors of the recent H5N1 avian influenza outbreak in Turkey. To date, these libraries have yielded >300 unique antibodies against H5N1 viral antigens. Among these antibodies, we have identified several broadly reactive neutralizing antibodies that could be used for passive immunization against H5N1 virus or as guides for vaccine design. The large number of antibodies obtained from these survivors provide a detailed immunochemical analysis of individual human solutions to virus neutralization in the setting of an actual virulent influenza outbreak. Remarkably, three of these antibodies neutralized both H1 and H5 subtype influenza viruses

    Link to full story:

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

      these "antibodies" , is it what elsewhere was called "epitopes",
      short amino-sequences of ~20 proteins ?

      so they make a (secret ?) database of 300 H5N1-epitopes ?
      I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
      my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

        an epitope is a small part of an antigen.( the more immunogenic part )
        one antibody is against one special epitope.

        here : page 5 a schema : http://vir.sgmjournals.org/cgi/repri...5fad5275964982

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

          OK, but aren't the antibodies uniquely 1-1 determined by the epitopes ?

          so a database ("library") of antibodies would be essentially a database of epitopes
          I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
          my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

            I started to write a post for this thread but as it wondered off topic and got rather long I have posted it else, where but for those interested ...

            If you are sitting comfortably I am going to tell you a story about a great battle in the war. We knew they were going to attack; it was only a matter of time. All our forces broadcast our friend or foe signal MHC and we had the signals scouts from B company & T company troops who knew what some of the enemy looked like -

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Scientists Create First Successful Libraries of Avian Flu Virus Antibodies

              Source: http://www.biotechnews.com.au/index....B16%3Bfpid%3B1

              Bird flu library
              Scientists create comprehensive libraries of avian flu virus antibodies
              Staff Writers 16/04/2008 11:44:27

              Source: Scripps Research Institute

              An international group of American and Turkish research scientists, led by Sea Lane Biotechnologies, has created the first comprehensive monoclonal antibody libraries against avian influenza (H5N1) using samples from survivors of the 2005/2006 bird flu outbreak in Turkey.

              These antibody libraries hold the promise for developing a therapy that could stop a pandemic in its tracks and provide treatment to those infected, as well as potentially pointing the way towards the development of a universal flu vaccine, Sea Lane said.

              "Three global influenza pandemics have occurred within the past 100 years, each with devastating consequences," Professor Richard Lerner, president of the Scripps Research Institute, who collaborated with Sea Lane on a study published in the US Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences..

              "Our study holds out the hope that a new outbreak could potentially be stopped at an early stage, and that effective treatment could be available to those infected."

              So far, the new antibody libraries reported in the study have yielded more than 300 unique monoclonal antibodies that are active against H5N1 antigens. From this group, the authors identified several broadly neutralizing antibodies that were effective against a number of contemporary subtypes of H5 (avian) flu.

              The new research suggests that the antibodies recovered from the avian flu survivors may point to an exploitable weak spot in the virus, offering the tantalising possibility that a "universal" vaccine against all strains might be made.

              Three of the more than 300 antibodies catalogued have been found to neutralize both the H1 (common seasonal flu) and H5 (avian) subtypes.

              "The antibodies we have isolated have the potential to be used directly as therapeutic agents against multiple influenza subtypes, permitting the resolution of infection upon administration to an infected individual," another collaborator, Professor Peter Palese of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said.

              "Perhaps most importantly, these antibodies may be used to identify cross-reactive epitopes on the hemagglutinin protein of an influenza virus. Identification of such epitopes may allow the rational design of vaccines with cross-subtype neutralising activity.

              "Such vaccines would constitute a major advance on current technology, and would be a first step towards the design of a universal influenza vaccine."

              The antibody libraries were not dependent on whether an important antibody was being produced by the body at the time of the sample collection. Instead, the scientists were able to obtain the entire immunologic history of an individual's response, which offered a clearer picture of the relationships between antibodies and their relative effectiveness.

              Comment

              Working...
              X