The Borneo Post

Transgenic cows produce ‘safe’ trial therapy for MERS

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PARIS: An experiment­al treatment for deadly Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome ( MERS) has been manufactur­ed in cattle carrying human DNA, and proved ‘safe’ when injected into human guinea pigs, scientists reported yesterday.

Dubbed SAB- 301, the trial therapy had no serious side effects, the team said.

It is too early to tell whether the therapy actually works against the MERS virus which kills over a third of people it infects.

“The data from our study suggests that SAB- 301 is safe, and further research into the treatment is warranted,” said John Beigel of the Marylandba­sed Leidos Biomedical Research company.

The results of a Phase 1 trial, the first step in vetting a new drug for safety and effectiven­ess, were published in the medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases.

For the experiment, the team used so-called ‘transchrom­osomic’ cattle, which are bred with human DNA that carries the genetic code for cells to produce virus-fighting antibodies. These can then be injected directly into sick people.

Antibodies can be harvested from people whose immune systems had already fought the disease, but not in large enough quantities, or fast enough, to stop an epidemic of diseases such as MERS, Ebola or the flu, the researcher­s explained.

The “use of transchrom­osomic cattle to manufactur­e specific antibodies potentiall­y could help to overcome these difficulti­es because these animals can produce large amounts of different types of antibodies,” the study authors said.

In the trial, cattle were injected with part of the MERS virus, stimulatin­g their immune system to produce antibodies which were then extracted and purified before being given to 28 healthy human volunteers. — AFP

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