Yorkshire Post

Immune system’s molecule could hold key to cure for common cold

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A MOLECULE found in the immune systems of humans and animals has been hailed as an “exciting discovery” in the search for a cure for the common cold.

Scientists at Edinburgh Napier University have discovered possible new treatments based on antimicrob­ial peptides that occur naturally in humans and animals, and increase the body’s natural response to infection.

A five-year study into peptides from different mammals found they all have properties that can combat rhinovirus, the main virus responsibl­e for the common cold infection in humans.

Dr Peter Barlow, associate professor of immunology and infection at the university, said research is still in the early stages, but added: “We will ultimately be looking to develop drug treatments that have the potential to cure the common cold.”

The next step in the project will see scientists try to modify the peptide to make it better at killing the rhinovirus, he said.

“There is no cure and no vaccine so the developmen­t of effective therapies for human rhinovirus, the main causal agent of the common cold, and one of the most common causes of viral respirator­y tract infections, is an urgent requiremen­t,” he said. “This study represents a major step towards finding a treatment.”

An effective treatment for the cold could help sufferers of more serious lung conditions, such as asthma and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, for whom viral infections can pose a serious health risk. Earlier research underlined the potential of antimicrob­ial peptides in tackling the influenza A virus.

The £200,000 latest study explored the possibilit­y of using antimicrob­ial peptides from pigs and sheep to fight the rhinovirus.

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