What Do Llamas and Nurse Sharks Have in Common?

MP3 WAV

More Information

Multimeric single-domain antibody complexes protect against bunyavirus infections
he World Health Organization has included three bunyaviruses posing an increasing threat to human health on the Blueprint list of viruses likely to cause major epidemics and for which no, or insufficient countermeasures exist. Here, we describe a broadly applicable strategy, based on llama-derived single-domain antibodies (VHHs), for the development of bunyavirus biotherapeutics...

Biologists invent a new way to fight viruses with llama blood and molecular superglue
For more than 20 years, researchers have tried with limited success to engineer antibodies into new treatments for bacterial and viral infections. Now, a team of scientists has come up with a new approach: fastening together tiny antibodies from llama blood with a type of bacterial superglue. The interconnected antibodies protect mice from two dangerous viruses, and they could subdue other pathogens...

Mini-antibodies discovered in sharks and camels could lead to drugs for cancer and other diseases
Helen Dooley admits that she often gets puzzled responses when she describes her work. "People say, 'You bleed sharks for a living?'" That's an overstatement, but every couple of weeks she and a helper drop by several large fiberglass tanks at the Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology on the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland...