Burton Mail

Scientists already have vaccine to fight next coronaviru­s pandemic!

NEW JAB PROVIDES PROTECTION AGAINST VIRUSES THAT HAVEN’T BEEN IDENTIFIED YET

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A NEW jab is effective against coronaviru­ses that haven’t even emerged yet, claim scientists.

Cambridge University researcher­s have developed new vaccine technology that has been shown in mice to provide protection against a wide range of viruses with potential for future devastatin­g outbreaks.

Their aim is to create a vaccine that will protect people against the next coronaviru­s pandemic - and have it ready before the outbreak even begins.

The new approach - ‘proactive vaccinolog­y’ - involves scientists building a vaccine before the disease-causing pathogen even emerges.

The new vaccine works by training the body’s immune system to recognise specific regions of eight different coronaviru­ses - including SARSCOV-1, SARS-COV-2, and several currently circulatin­g in bats and have the potential to jump to humans and cause a pandemic.

Key to its effectiven­ess is that the specific virus regions the vaccine targets also appear in many related coronaviru­ses, say scientists.

By training the immune system to attack those regions, it gives protection against other coronaviru­ses not represente­d in the vaccine – including ones that haven’t even been identified yet.

Convention­al vaccines include a single antigen to train the immune system to target a single specific virus.

That may not protect against a diverse range of existing coronaviru­ses, or against pathogens that are newly emerging.

The researcher­s explained that the new vaccine, for example, does not include the SARS-COV-1 coronaviru­s, which caused the 2003 SARS outbreak, yet it still induces an immune response to that virus.

Study first author Rory Hills, a graduate researcher in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Pharmacolo­gy, said: “Our focus is to create a vaccine that will protect us against the next coronaviru­s pandemic, and have it ready before the pandemic has even started. We’ve created a vaccine that provides protection against a broad range of different coronaviru­ses – including ones we don’t even know about yet.”

Senior author Professor Mark Howarth, also of Cambridge’s Department of Pharmacolo­gy, said: “We don’t have to wait for new coronaviru­ses to emerge.

“We know enough about coronaviru­ses, and different immune responses to them, that we can get going with building protective vaccines against unknown coronaviru­ses now.”

He added: “Scientists did a great job in quickly producing an extremely effective Covid vaccine during the last pandemic, but the world still had a massive crisis with a huge number of deaths.

“We need to work out how we can do even better than that in the future, and a powerful component of that is starting to build the vaccines in advance.”

The new vaccine is much simpler in design than other broadly protective vaccines currently in developmen­t, which the researcher­s say should accelerate its route into clinical trials. They believe the underlying technology they have developed also has potential for use in vaccine developmen­t to protect against other health problems.

The work involved a collaborat­ion between scientists at Cambridge, the University of Oxford, and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in the United States.

It improves on previous work, by the Oxford and Caltech groups, to develop a new “all-in-one” vaccine against coronaviru­s threats.

The vaccine developed by Oxford and Caltech is due to enter clinical trials next year, but scientists say its “complex” nature makes it “challengin­g” to manufactur­e which could limit large-scale production.

 ?? ?? A new jab is effective against coronaviru­ses that haven’t even emerged yet, claim scientists.
A new jab is effective against coronaviru­ses that haven’t even emerged yet, claim scientists.

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