POST Online Media Lite Edition



 

Antibody protects against Zika and dengue

Staff Writer |
Brazil and other areas hardest hit by the Zika virus are also home to dengue virus, which is spread by the same mosquito species.

Article continues below






A new study led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis shows that an antibody that protects against dengue virus is also effective against Zika in mice.

Antibodies remain in the bloodstream for weeks, so one or a few doses of an antibody-based drug given over the course of a woman's pregnancy potentially could protect her fetus from Zika, with the added benefit of protecting her from both Zika and dengue disease, the researchers said.

Dengue causes high fever, severe headaches, and joint and muscle pain in children and adults but does not directly harm fetuses.

"We found that this antibody not only neutralizes the dengue virus but, in mice, protects both adults and fetuses from Zika disease," said Michael S. Diamond, MD, PhD, the Herbert S. Gasser Professor of Medicine and the study's senior author.

Since dengue and Zika are related viruses, the researchers reasoned that an antibody that prevents dengue disease may do the same for Zika. Diamond and graduate student Estefania Fernandez collaborated with Gavin Screaton, MD, DPhil, of Imperial College London, who had generated a panel of human anti-dengue antibodies years before.

The scientists infected nonpregnant adult mice with Zika virus and then administered one of the anti-dengue antibodies one, three or five days after infection.

For comparison, another group of mice was infected with Zika virus and then given a placebo.

Within three weeks of infection, more than 80 percent of the untreated mice had died, whereas all of the mice that received the anti-dengue antibody within three days of infection were still alive, and 40 percent of those that received the antibody five days after infection survived.

To find out whether the antibody also could protect fetuses from infection, the researchers infected female mice on the sixth day of their pregnancies with Zika virus and then administered a dose of antibody or a placebo one or three days later.

On the 13th day of gestation, the amount of Zika's genetic material was 600,000 times lower in the placentas and 4,900 times lower in the fetal heads from the pregnant mice that were treated one day after infection, compared with mice that received the placebo.

However, administering the antibody three days after infection was less effective: It reduced the amount of viral genetic material in the fetal heads nineteenfold and in the placentas twenty-threefold.

These findings suggest that for the antibody to effectively protect fetuses from Zika infection, it must be administered soon after infection. Such a goal may be unrealistic clinically because women rarely know when they get infected.

However, giving women the antibody as soon as they know they are pregnant could provide them with a ready-made defense against the virus should they encounter it.

Antibody-based drugs have been used for decades to provide temporary protection against infectious diseases such as rabies when there is no time to vaccinate or, as in the case of Zika, when there is no vaccine available.

The key to using this antibody as a preventive drug would be to make sure that antibody levels in a woman's bloodstream stay high enough to protect her fetus for the duration of her pregnancy.

Diamond and colleagues are working on identifying how much antibody a pregnant woman would need to ensure that her fetus is protected from Zika.

They also are exploring ways to extend the antibody's half-life in the blood, to reduce the number of times it would need to be administered.

Having anti-dengue antibodies circulating in the bloodstream for months on end poses a risk, though, because antibodies that protect against one strain of dengue virus sometimes worsen symptoms if a person is infected by another dengue strain.

To avoid the possibility of accidentally aggravating an already very painful disease, the researchers mutated the antibody in four spots, making it impossible for the antibody to exacerbate dengue disease.


What to read next

Mosquito-borne diseases plummet 88.9 percent in Brazil
Zika virus tied to rare disorder that can cause paralysis
WHO: Up to 4 million infected by Zika virus in the Americas

U.S.: Regional severe weather through early next week; early season heat wave across South

 
A very active and complex mid-May weather pattern is set to produce numerous areas of severe weather, heavy rain, high winds, and anomalous temperatures through this weekend.
 
 

Latest

Governor Hochul announces inflation refund checks up to $400 coming this fall
Czechia recovers CZK 60 million in dispute with European Commission
Colombia formally joins Belt and Road Initiative
Egg exports grow in April and Brazil expands its presence in new markets

NEWS

U.S.: Areas of excessive rainfall and severe thunderstorm potential today

Captain of Hong Kong ship charged with damage to Baltic gas pipeline
U.S.: Strong to severe thunderstorms from Southern Plains to Ohio Valley
U.S.: Severe thunderstorms, heavy rain and fire threat
Peru court jails ex-President Humala for money laundering
Bosnia risks air traffic shutdown over unpaid debt
 

BUSINESS

Italy, Greece to invest 1.9bn euro in new subsea interconnector

Iran to export BCG vaccine to Venezuela
Baker Hughes: U.S. oil rig count down by 5 to 474
U.S. rig count drops for first time in three weeks
Azerbaijan seeks investor to build bitumen materials plant
Baker Hughes: U.S. oil rig count up by 2 to 483
 

Trending Now

Suez Canal offers 15 pct discount for large container ships

UK: TRA recommendation for new duties on Chinese excavators accepted

Concirrus appoints Steve O'Reilly as product manager

EU to fully end its dependency on Russian energy


POLITICS

€5 billion French scheme to facilitate export of wines and spirits to U.S.

EU to fully end its dependency on Russian energy
UK: TRA recommendation for new duties on Chinese excavators accepted
Commission: Sweden failing to fulfil its obligations under EU maritime security acquis
European Parliament approved wide framework for screening of foreign direct investments
Government and MBS Global Investments to create Maldives International Financial Centre
 

Today We Recommend

EU to fully end its dependency on Russian energy


Highlights 

Carrier to create 4,000 highly skilled jobs in U.S.

Boeing and Qatar Airways announce historic order for up to 210 widebody airplanes

Italy, Greece to invest 1.9bn euro in new subsea interconnector


COMPANIES

Carrier to create 4,000 highly skilled jobs in U.S.

Boeing and Qatar Airways announce historic order for up to 210 widebody airplanes
Suez Canal offers 15 pct discount for large container ships
LEGO Group will create 305 new jobs in Prince George County, Virginia
PPG will establish Cleveland County manufacturing center creating 110 jobs
Disney announces Abu Dhabi theme park and resort
 

CAREERS

Tom Montali joins CSL as business development director

Concirrus appoints Steve O'Reilly as product manager
Jetcraft appoints Philip Baer as sales director in U.S.
Pere Mañé appointed as new CEO of Suanfarma
Ben Söderling new CEO of Sovellusmestarit Oy and MoveRoll Oy
Helio Fujita joins Mars as global people & organization VP for petcare business
 

ECONOMY

NZ exports to EU jump 28% in first year of trade deal

EU generated €39.2 billion surplus in trade in agricultural products
California is now world’s 4th-largest economy
Thailand's exports jump 17.8 pct to 3-year high in March
Turkish exports hit second highest March figure on record
EU hourly labour costs ranged from €11 to €55 in 2024
 

EARNINGS

Ericsson Q2 sales down but North America up

Lockton revenue $3.55 billion
Motorcar Parts of America Q4 sales $189.5 million
Limoneira Q2 revenue $44.6 million
Lululemon athletica Q1 revenue increased 10% to $2.2 billion
PVH Q1 GAAP EBIT $205 million
 

OP-ED

Micromanaging is the worst enemy of efficiency and teamwork

Niger set to monetize massive gas reserves through Saharan natural gas pipeline
Putting the brakes on EV folly that choked the market
Oil discovery in Kavango Basin may mean huge benefits for Namibians
Cape Town and Dubai battle over Africa's energy future
Is America going to lose its superpower status?
 

AGRIFISH

Minister István Nagy: FMD immunity can be announced on May 30

£50 million equipment and technology grants to boost food production, farm profitability
Philippines approves beef supplies from Russia
Hong Kong: Import of poultry meat and products from areas in U.S. suspended
U.S.-Mexico reach agreement on screwworm
Tanzania bans agricultural imports from South Africa and Malawi
 

LEADERSHIP

Study: Missing a deadline has a bigger impact than you might think

Employers prefer younger job candidates for AI roles although experienced workers perform same or better
Study finds workers misjudge wage markets
Some organizations may need to expand their hierarchical structures earlier than others
Study finds there's right way and wrong way to deliver negative feedback in workplace
Allyship is critical and its needs appreciation
 

CRIME

EU fines carmakers €458 million for anti-recycling cartel

Commission fines Pierre Cardin and its licensee Ahlers €5.7 million for restricting cross-border sales of clothing
BHP, Vale agree to pay $30B damages for Brazil dam disaster
Commission fines České dráhy and Österreichische Bundesbahnen €48.7 million over collusion to exclude common compe
SEC charges Keurig with making inaccurate statements regarding recyclability of K-Cup beverage pod
SEC charges John Deere with FCPA violations for subsidiary’s role in Thai bribery scheme
 

Magazine

TRAVEL

Radisson Hotel Group debuts in the heart of Tunisia’s capital city, Tunis

Morocco’s first Radisson branded hotel opens in Casablanca
Buna channels, an unreal and beautiful part of Bosnia and Herzegovina
JW Marriott unveils Mindful Haven with opening of JW Marriott Hotel Nairobi
Sotheby's Sports Week returns with fantastic artifacts
Red Roof properties open in Michigan
 

SEA, LAND, AIR

Citroën C3 Aircross, the most affordable compact SUV with 7 seats

2025 Chevrolet Equinox stands apart with fresh looks and capability
Hill Helicopters HX50, luxury in the sky
Opel Movano becomes fully equipped camper van
Porsche Panamera, new hybrid variants
Dodge Charger, 670 horsepower of electric
 

DESIGN

Cold night, hot fire pit, cool entertainment

Embellish your home with PVC panels
You'll have to hurry if you want one of 20 new Louis Vuitton watches
Luxury duvet looks good, fells good and keeps you healthy
Vacheron Constantin, watches for life and more
Schüller kitchens, where functionality marries design
 

GADGETS

MESA/Boogie Celebrates 40-year partnership with John Petrucci

reMarkable 2, monochrome tablet for your thoughts and your eyes
OnePlus Ace 3V, first with Snapdragon 7 Plus Gen 3
ASUS Zenfone 11 Ultra, flagship with a reason
Samsung Galaxy S24 is photography powerhouse
Casette tapes are making a big comeback, and so are portable players
 

HEALTH

Hong Kong researchers develop needle-free flu vaccine with broad protection

World's first vaccines that don't need refrigeration entered trials
First patient enrolled in Phase 1 clinical trial of Akiram’s cancer drug candidate
FDA grants marketing authorization of first home test for chlamydia, gonorrhea and trichomoniasis
Human cases of anthrax reported in western Mongolia
One more barrier to developing vaccine for HIV removed
 

MEANTIME

Mission to "weigh" all of Earth's forests from space launched

NASA's SPHEREx space telescope begins mapping entire sky
Russian academics, gas industry experts see undersea LNG transportation as feasible
India launches space docking experiment mission
World-first carbon-14 diamond battery made
Einstein Telescope step closer