News and Research
Immune System
Scientists Identify A Human Antibody That Blocks SARS
Virus Infection
2-4-2004
BOSTON -- An antibody plucked from a "library"
of human antibodies has powerfully blocked infection by
the SARS virus in laboratory tests, scientists at Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute report. This discovery could expedite the
development of an antibody drug for the prevention or early
treatment of SARS, which killed nearly 800 people in a global
outbreak last year.
Researchers
from Dana-Farber, Brigham and Women's Hospital, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Children's
Hospital Boston discovered that the antibody neutralized
SARS infection in a laboratory setting by blocking the virus
from entering cultured cells. The experiments are continuing
in animal models of SARS, and the researchers are discussing
future trials in humans. The findings will be posted the
week of Feb. 2 on the PNAS Online Early Edition of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
Wayne
Marasco, MD, PhD, of Dana-Farber, and colleagues isolated
the monoclonal antibody and demonstrated its effectiveness
within six months after the SARS virus was discovered. "This
is really a proof of principle for responding to emerging
infectious diseases," says Marasco, the paper's senior
author. "If the international community works together,
it can make a serious dent in the time it takes to develop
protective treatments against these threats."
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The paper's first author is Jianhua Sui, MD, PhD,
a research fellow at Dana-Farber.
SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), a highly
contagious illness that often progresses to pneumonia and is sometimes
fatal, was first reported in Asia in February 2003. Over the next
several months it spread to more than two dozen countries in North
America, South America, Europe, and Asia and infected nearly 8,100
people (only a few in the United States) before it was contained.
Early this year, Chinese authorities confirmed three new cases in
that country, but there has been no sign of a renewed outbreak.
Even without a current crisis, scientists say the
SARS threat has not been eradicated, and they are working urgently
to develop a preventive vaccine and effective treatment for the disease,
neither of which exist.
Part of the body's immune system, an antibody is a
special blood protein that defends against bacteria, viruses and other
foreign substances that enter the body. Evolution has equipped the
immune system to generate specific antibodies to fight almost any
foreseeable invader, through a mechanism that uses genetic material
from immune cells in a powerful combinatorial way that can produce
billions of antibodies.
The SARS virus-specific human monoclonal antibody
isolated by Marasco's team in Dana-Farber's Center for Cancer Immunology
and AIDS was selected from Marasco's collection, one of the world's
largest human antibody phage display libraries. The collection contains
about 27 billion monoclonal antibodies generated by a mixture of blood
cells from 57 human donors.
Last spring, scientists published the genetic sequence
of the SARS virus, which is a type of coronavirus. Shortly afterward,
Sui and her colleagues started to identify antibodies against a synthetic
S1 protein that was made in the lab of Michael Farzan, PhD, of the
Partners AIDS Research Center at Brigham and Women's.
The S1 protein is a building block of the virus' "spike"
structure that enables it to infect host cells. The researchers coated
test tubes with the S1 protein, and poured in a solution containing
the antibody libraries. From this vast collection, they selected eight
antibodies that recognized and bound to the S1 protein, and thus might
be able to interfere with the virus's infection mechanism. The eight
antibodies were tested in the CDC laboratories in Atlanta, where scientists
found that one of the antibodies (labeled the 80R antibody) potently
blocked live SARS viruses from entering cultured human cells. "It
was one of those Eureka experiences," says Marasco. 'It was pretty
dramatic."
The scientists determined that the antibody prevented
infection through high-affinity binding to the S1 protein's receptor
binding domain. Conventional vaccines stimulate the body's immune
cells to produce antibodies against a particular viral or bacterial
foe, giving them protection as long as the antibodies are in force.
In another strategy, known as "passive immunization," people
can be given antibodies collected from the blood of people who've
fought off the disease of interest. Human monoclonal antibodies made
in the lab are another important tool for passive immunization or
early treatment of a viral infection.
Marasco says the 80R antibody is an effective viral
entry inhibitor, looks promising in animal tests and could be commercially
developed for testing in clinical trials. "It would be very satisfying
to see this go into humans and do good," says Marasco, who is
also an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
He believes the antibody could be widely available before a successful
conventional vaccine is developed, and he would like to see it tested
in the southern province of mainland Southern China and Hong Kong
in collaboration with scientists from these regions.
The research was funded by grants from the National
Institutes of Health.
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (http://www.danafarber.org)
is a principal teaching affiliate of the Harvard Medical School and
is among the leading cancer research and care centers in the United
States. It is a founding member of the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer
Center (DF/HCC), designated a comprehensive cancer center by the National
Cancer Institute.
This article has been adapted from a news release
issued by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, www.dfci.harvard.edu.
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