Ebola, a rare and deadly disease, exists as five strains and none of which have approved therapies. One of the most lethal strains is the Sudan Ebola virus (SUDV).
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The team's antibody was directed against SUDV and was made in mice. But the human immune system could potentially recognize that antibody as foreign and ultimately get rid of it, preventing the antibody from treating the disease. To avoid this situation, they wanted to make a "humanized" version of the antibody.
In the newly published work, the team put the Ebola-specific part of the mouse antibody onto a human antibody scaffold and made some changes to this molecule. They identified two versions that were able to fend off SUDV in laboratory tests on cells and in specially bred mice. "These antibodies represent strong immunotherapeutic candidates for the treatment of SUDV infection," say the researchers.
This research, however, isn't expected to help with the current Ebola outbreak that, as of mid-August, has killed at least 1,200 people. That's because antibodies that kill off one strain of the virus haven't worked against other strains. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration — which has not yet approved any Ebola therapies — did allow two U.S. aid workers infected during the current outbreak to be treated with an experimental drug, which is a cocktail of antibodies specifically targeting EBOV.
Source-Eurekalert