NIAID Lab Helps Ready Us for Potential Pandemic
Public health officials who warn
Kanta Subbarao, M.D., senior investigator in the Respiratory Viruses Section of NIAID’s Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, headed by Brian Murphy, M.D. and Robert Purcell, M.D., is working to prevent the worst case scenario from occurring. She and others in the lab are creating a vaccine for each of the 15 hemagglutinin proteins found in bird strains of influenza A that currently are not transmissible to humans. In this way, should a strain containing any one of these proteins make the jump to people, a vaccine could be prepared rapidly. The live, attenuated vaccines would be given as a nasal spray.
Heading the list of vaccines to be developed are those for the proteins H2, H5, H7, and H9, which is in keeping with priorities set by the World Health Organization. H2, though currently transmissible among humans, has not circulated since 1968; therefore, anyone born after that year has never been exposed to it.
Once the pandemic vaccines have been developed, they will be tested - first in animals and later in humans - for safety and the ability to spur an immune response.
For more information, visit her NIAID laboratory Web page.
Courtesy: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases