Category: Immunology (page 2 of 7)

a forever flu shot

 

Flu Shot

Once again it’s time for flu vaccinations and Science magazine teases us with the idea of a once in a life time flu vaccine:

Flu vaccines trigger production of antibodies that attach to hemagglutinin, a protein on the surface of the virus that helps it infect cells. But hemagglutinin mutates so rapidly that antibodies to one human variant have limited power against another, requiring vaccine makers to reformulate their shots each year. And when a novel animal flu jumps from birds or pigs into humans, existing immunity offers little defense and a pandemic can arise. Stopping it would require a new vaccine, which inevitably can’t be developed quickly enough.

Recently, researchers have found a possible solution: “broadly neutralizing antibodies” (bNAbs) in humans to hemagglutinin, able to bind most, if not all, variants. Like bNAbs discovered for HIV (see main article, p. 1168), they have sparked provocative ideas about how to make a single vaccine that could thwart all strains of the virus.

The bNAbs to influenza are slow to develop in part because hemagglutinin naturally crowds the viral surface, hiding the stem regions of the protein from the immune system. Led by virologist Gary Nabel, the group described in the 4 July issue of Nature how it created an artificial, self-assembling nanoparticle called ferritin, an iron-storage protein, that expresses hemagglutinins at an unnatural angle, exposing their stalks. This new presentation of the protein leads to a potent bNAb response.

the effects of bad science

Vaccination

A new epidemic of measles has broken out in Wales. Vaccination rates fell after a paper linking the vaccine to autism was published in the 1998. The paper was later proven to be fraudulent. NPR reports:

More than 1,200 people have come down with measles so far this year, following nearly 2,000 cases in 2012. Many of the cases have been in Wales.

Childhood vaccination rates plummeted in Great Britain after a 1998 paper by Dr. Andrew Wakefield claimed that the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella had caused autism in a dozen children. That study has since been proven , but it fueled fears about vaccine safety in Great Britain and the United States.

“This is the legacy of the Wakefield scare,” Dr. David Elliman, spokesman for the Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health, told The Associated Press.

Most of the measles cases have been in children and teenagers between the ages of 10 and 18, according to British health officials. In that age group, vaccination rates dropped below 50 percent in some parts of England after the Wakefield paper was published.

AIDS vaccine fails

Scanning electron micrograph of HIV-1 budding (in green) from cultured lymphocyte

The past two weeks brought plenty of interesting science news, including the failure of a potential AIDS vaccine. From Popular Science:

The study, called HVTN-505, was begun in 2009, over the years enrolling over 2,500 volunteers. The vaccination process doesn’t actually involve any live or even deactivated HIV; instead, it starts with one that includes genetic material that’s simply modeled after the virus, to prime the immune system. Then comes the real vaccine, involving recombinant DNA (meaning, DNA from various sources) based on adenovirus type 5, a common cold virus that in this case has been disabled so it doesn’t actually cause a cold. Attached to those adenoviruses are artificial versions of HIV antigens. Antigens–the term is short for antibody generator–trigger an immune response, and these artificial antigens were designed to attack the three major HIV subtypes.

This technique had shown some mild success before; in a study in Thailand in 2009, it showed a 31 percent reduction in the HIV infection rate, which sounds good to me, but is apparently not enough to really do more than encourage further research. Unfortunately, that was as much success as this strategy ever saw.

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