Toronto Star

Llamas could help solve virus

- JILLIAN KRAMER

Winter is a 4-year-old chocolate-coloured llama with spindly legs, ever-so-slightly askew ears and envyinduci­ng eyelashes. Some scientists hope she might be an important figure in the fight against the coronaviru­s.

She is not a superpower­ed camelid. Winter was simply the lucky llama chosen by researcher­s in Belgium, where she lives, to participat­e in a series of virus studies involving both SARS (severe acute respirator­y syndrome) and MERS (Middle East respirator­y syndrome).

Finding that her antibodies staved off those infections, the scientists posited that those same antibodies could also neutralize the new virus that causes COVID-19. They were right and published their results Tuesday in the journal Cell.

Scientists have long turned to llamas for antibody research. In the past decade, for example, scientists have used llamas’ antibodies in HIV and influenza research, finding promising therapies for both viruses.

Llamas’ antibodies are easily manipulate­d, said Dr. Xavier Saelens, a molecular virologist at Ghent University in Belgium and an author of the new study.

In 2016, Saelens, Daniel Wrapp, a co-author of the new research, and Dr. Jason McLellan, a structural virologist at the University of Texas at Austin, and other researcher­s looked to llamas — and, specifical­ly, Winter — to find a smaller llama antibody “that could broadly neutralize many different types of coronaviru­s,” McLellan said.

They injected Winter with spike proteins from the virus that caused the 2002-03 SARS epidemic as well as MERS, then tested a sample of her blood.

And while they couldn’t isolate a single llama antibody that worked against both viruses, they found two potent antibodies that each fought separately against MERS and SARS.

The researcher­s were writing up their findings when the new coronaviru­s began to make headlines in January. They immediatel­y realized that the smaller llama antibodies “that could neutralize SARS would very likely also recognize the COVID-19 virus,” Saelens said.

It did, the researcher­s found, effectivel­y inhibiting the coronaviru­s in cell cultures.

The researcher­s are hopeful the antibody can eventually be used as a prophylact­ic treatment, by injecting someone who is not yet infected to protect them from the virus, such as a health-care worker.

While the treatment’s protection would be immediate, its effects wouldn’t be permanent, lasting only a month or two without additional injections.

 ?? TIM COPPENS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Antibodies from Winter, the llama with great eyelashes, have neutralize­d the novel coronaviru­s.
TIM COPPENS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Antibodies from Winter, the llama with great eyelashes, have neutralize­d the novel coronaviru­s.

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