Khaleej Times

‘Killer’ cells raise hope of universal flu vaccine

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paris — Scientists said on Monday they had discovered immune cells that can fight all known flu viruses in what was hailed as an “extraordin­ary breakthrou­gh” that could lead to a universal, one-shot vaccine against the killer disease.

Influenza epidemics, largely seasonal, kill hundreds of thousands of people each year, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Due to its mutating strains, vaccine formulas must be regularly updated and only offer limited protection currently.

Researcher­s in Australia said that “killer T cells” — found in over half the world’s population — had shown in testing to be effective in fighting all common flu varieties. This means the cells could potentiall­y be used to develop an all-encompassi­ng flu shot that did not need to be changed annually, and even be effective in people who don’t naturally possess them.

“Influenza viruses continuous­ly mutate to evade recognitio­n by our immune system, and they are vastly diverse, making it nearly impossible to predict and vaccinate against the strain that will cause the next influenza pandemic,” said Marios Koutsakos, a researcher at the University of Melbourne’s Doherty Institute.

T cells are a type of white blood cell that roams the body scanning for abnormalit­ies and infections.

They are essential for human immunity against a host of invading bacteria and viruses.

So-called “killer” T cells are unique in that they can directly target and kill other infected cells.

Koutsakos and his colleagues used mass spectromet­ry — a scanning technique that helps separate molecules based on their mass — to identify parts of the virus that are shared across all flu strains, and realised that killer T cells could effectivel­y fight variations of influenza A, B and C.

Flu is especially dangerous for elderly people, children and those with compromise­d immune systems, as well as certain ethnic groups who never developed immune responses to the disease.

The team behind the research has patented their discovery, and researcher­s said they hoped it would enable them to develop a universal influenza vaccine “to reduce the impact of pandemic and seasonal influenza around the world”. —

 ?? AFP file ?? ‘Killer t cells’ could potentiall­y be used to develop an allencompa­ssing flu shot that did not need to be changed annually, and even be effective in people who don’t naturally possess them. —
AFP file ‘Killer t cells’ could potentiall­y be used to develop an allencompa­ssing flu shot that did not need to be changed annually, and even be effective in people who don’t naturally possess them. —

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