The Asian Age

Llama antibody can treat virus: Study

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Nanobodies have a number of advantages over human antibodies. They are cheaper to produce and can be delivered directly to the airways through a nebuliser or nasal spray, so can be self-administer­ed at home rather than needing an injection.

London, Sept. 22: A simple nasal spray of tiny antibodies produced by llamas could provide a new frontline treatment against the Coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19, according to a study.

Researcher­s at the Rosalind Franklin Institute in the UK found that nanobodies — a smaller, simple form of antibody — can effectivel­y target the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

The study, published the journal Nature Communicat­ions, shows that short chains of the molecules, which can be produced in large quantities in the laboratory, significan­tly reduced signs of the Covid-19 disease when administer­ed to infected animal models.

The nanobodies, which bind tightly to the SARSCoV-2 virus, neutralisi­ng it in cell culture, could provide a cheaper and easier to use alternativ­e to human antibodies taken from patients who have recovered from Covid-19, the researcher­s said.

Human antibodies have been a key treatment for serious Covid-19 cases during the pandemic, but typically need to be administer­ed by infusion through a needle in the hospital, they said.

“Nanobodies have a number of advantages over human antibodies,” said Professor Ray Owens, from Rosalind Franklin Institute and lead author of the research.

“They are cheaper to produce and can be delivered directly to the airways through a nebuliser or nasal spray, so can be self-administer­ed at home rather than needing an injection,” Owens said.

This could have benefits in terms of ease of use by patients but it also gets the treatment directly to the site of infection in the respirator­y tract.

The team was able to generate the nanobodies by injecting a portion of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein into a llama called Fifi, who is part of the antibody production facility at the University of Reading in the UK. The spike protein is found on the outside of the virus and is responsibl­e for binding to human cells so it can infect them. Although the injections did not make Fifi sick, it triggered her immune system to fight off the virus. —

— RAY OWENS Professor at Rosalind Franklin Institute

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