Thursday, 16 May 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS 9 Popular Priyanka Biswash Web Series List 2024 | 5 Dariya News Buy Generic Medicines at Affordable Prices from an Online Medicine App Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla interacts with IFS Probationers Lt Governor Manoj Sinha reviews progress of schemes & projects of Jal Shakti Department Jammu and Kashmir participates in Cannes Film Festival 2024 Srinagar Admin holds Workshop on Operationalization of Decision Support System Ensure pothole free roads for smooth riding in Kashmir Division: Div Com Vijay Kumar Bidhuri DDC Rajouri Om Prakash Bhagat inspects developmental works in Kalakote Lt Governor Manoj Sinha chairs review meeting of Revenue Department DDMA discusses District Disaster Management Plan for Kishtwar PM KISAN scheme- DC Jammu Sachin Kumar Vaishya seeks detection of ineligible beneficiaries in 7 days DC Kishtwar Dr. Devansh Yadav inspects Road-Bridge works in Dachhan, Marwah area DC Doda Harvinder Singh flags off Vishwagram Trust’s Educational Activities in Doda District DC Samba Abhishek Sharma flags off 32 Haj Pilgrims from Samba Vice Chairperson Khadi and Village Industries Board Dr. Hina Shafi Bhat reviews bankers performance under PMEGP, JKREGP Gautam Gulati Net Worth [May-2024]: From Bigg Boss Winner to Multifaceted TV Actor | 5 Dariya News Lok Sabha Elections 2024: 80% Police Force, 250 Companies Of Central Forces To Ensure Free And Fair Polls In Punjab Aam Aadmi Party's counterattack on Charanjit Channi, Finance Minister Harpal Cheema said - Liquor mafia was rampant during Congress, we increased revenue Sanjay Tandon Receives Blessings from Baba Bageshwar Dham Bhagwant Mann campaigned for Laljit Bhullar in Zira and Bhikhiwind Sukhbir Singh Badal Questions Candidacy of Bhai Amritpal Singh

 

Researchers build prgrammable vaccine to fight pandemics

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

New York , 05 Jul 2016

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a new type of easily customisable vaccine that can be manufactured in one week, allowing it to be rapidly deployed in response to disease outbreaks.So far, they have designed vaccines against Ebola, H1N1 influenza, and Toxoplasma gondii (a relative of the parasite that causes malaria), which were 100 per cent effective in tests in mice, said a paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.The vaccine consists of strands of genetic material known as messenger RNA, which can be designed to code for any viral, bacterial, or parasitic protein.These molecules are then packaged into a molecule that delivers the RNA into cells, where it is translated into proteins that provoke an immune response from the host."This nanoformulation approach allows us to make vaccines against new diseases in only seven days, allowing the potential to deal with sudden outbreaks or make rapid modifications and improvements," said Daniel Anderson, Associate Professor at MIT's Department of Chemical Engineering and senior author of the study.The ability to rapidly design and manufacture these vaccines could be especially beneficial for fighting influenza, because the most common flu vaccine manufacturing method, which requires the viruses to be grown inside chicken eggs, takes months. 

This means that when an unexpected flu strain appears, such as the 2009 pandemic-causing H1N1 virus, there is no way to rapidly produce a vaccine against it."Typically a vaccine becomes available long after the outbreak is over," one of the lead researchers Jasdave Chahal explained."We think we can become interventional over the course of a real outbreak," Chahal noted.The vaccine is designed to be delivered by intramuscular injection, making it easy to administer. Once the particles get into cells, the RNA is translated into proteins that are released and stimulate the immune system.Significantly, the vaccines were able to stimulate both arms of the immune system -- a T cell response and an antibody response.In tests in mice, animals that received a single dose of one of the vaccines showed no symptoms following exposure to the real pathogen -- Ebola, H1N1 influenza, or Toxoplasma gondii."No matter what antigen we picked, we were able to drive the full antibody and T cell responses," one of the first authors Omar Khan said.In addition to targeting infectious diseases, the researchers are using this approach to create cancer vaccines that would teach the immune system to recognise and destroy tumours.

 

Tags: STUDY

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD