Western Mail

Scientists switch from cancer research to help develop vaccine

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A TEAM of Cardiff University scientists has switched from researchin­g cancer to work that could help towards a vaccine for coronaviru­s.

The team at the School of Medicine usually work on reprogramm­ing viruses so they can target and kill cancer – but they are now focusing their efforts to help in the fight against the new virus that is gripping the world.

Dr Alan Parker and his team, whose work on cancer is funded by Cancer Research UK, are drawing on their expertise in viruses to seek out “tools” which could be used to deliver a vaccine.

Their work over the past seven years has centred on modified adenovirus­es as viral vectors – or carriers – that can seek out and destroy cancer cells.

Over this time, Dr Parker and his team have a vast bank of different adenovirus­es, and now they plan to hunt out the viruses that may potentiall­y be used to deliver a vaccine for Covid-19.

The team claim to have already identified about half a dozen viral vectors which may be useful for encoding coronaviru­s antigens – the name for the part of the virus used to safely induce an immune response which may then offer protection against subsequent infection.

“Our aim is to produce potential vaccines and then pass these on to immunologi­sts to test to see if they are able to induce an immune response that can protect against coronaviru­s infection,” said Dr Parker.

“As scientists, we’re all wondering how we can usefully contribute. Everyone feels the same. Our role is just a small part of the huge effort that is under way to help fight this virus.”

Dr Parker and his team are already back at work in the labs at a university research building at the University Hospital of Wales.

“Being back in the lab is really weird. It’s so empty and really quite eerie,” said Dr Parker. “There are four of us on the team who have now been granted essential worker status and we’re having to maintain social distancing, so are working apart. It’s very strange.

“But thankfully for us we’re in our comfort zone when it comes to our research. Our expertise is in tinkering with viral vectors for therapeuti­c benefit. We’ve changed tack slightly – from fighting cancer to infectious disease – but we’re still doing what we’re good at and drawing on what we know.

“It’s not a change of direction I could have predicted a month ago but we’re all hoping it is temporary.”

He added: “The sheer volume of informatio­n and resources being shared and the speed of research has been remarkable,” he added.

“If we can draw any positives in all of this, it would be the way scientists and academic clinicians are coming together, drawing on their strengths and sharing expertise willingly.”

Professor Stephen Riley, head of the university’s School of Medicine, said: “It’s great to see how the scientific community is rising to the challenge of the Covid-19 crisis – applying groundbrea­king methods, across different domains, to tackle these challenges is the sign of an excellent researcher.”

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