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Medicine Science

How Llamas Could Help Us Fight the Flu (pbs.org) 56

An anonymous reader quotes a report from PBS: Researchers now think they're on the path to a new kind of flu protection -- one that might last longer and work against all types of influenza viruses. The source of their new defense: llamas. These furry South American mammals produce special antibodies -- molecules that mark foreign invaders in our bodies for destruction -- that can identify a huge range of elusive influenza viruses. A new study used these antibodies to target multiple strains of influenza at once, a technique that could lead to more effective flu prevention. These antibodies can survive without refrigeration for longer, which could reduce the cost and complexity of flu treatment.

The researchers behind Thursday's study fused four different single-domain antibodies into one larger molecule, held together with a human protein as a scaffold. When they injected this hybrid into mice, the antibodies kept the animals safe from a wide variety of influenza type A and type B viruses -- the two most common assailants in America's annual flu epidemic. This hybrid seemed to successfully target each of the five flu strains they tested. When the researchers injected mice with their hybrid antibody, it protected the mice from lethal doses of the flu. But the paper also explored another route of delivery: gene therapy. The researchers used a benign virus -- dubbed AAV -- to embed the genetic blueprint of the llama antibodies directly into mouse cells. This procedure allowed the mice to produce the antibodies on their own.

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How Llamas Could Help Us Fight the Flu

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  • winamp (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 04, 2018 @11:00PM (#57592030)

    now the llama is whipping flu's ass!

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday November 04, 2018 @11:11PM (#57592052)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:I call bullshit (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @12:22AM (#57592188)

      It won't be the first time llamas helped fight an epidemic.

      The Mapuche [wikipedia.org] tribe in Chile kept llamas, and were exposed to bacteria and viruses endemic in their herds. This gave them greater immunity to withstand European diseases, and they suffered far less die back than other Native Americans. Their larger population enabled them to fight the Spanish to a standstill, and they remained an independent self-governing nation until 1883.

      • Unfortunately there is nothing in that wikipedia page about llamas helping provide relative immunity. How could llamas help immunize against diseases which didn't exist on the continent? And why wouldn't all the other groups who used llamas have the same increased immunity?
        • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

          How could llamas help immunize against diseases which didn't exist on the continent?

          I think the proposed mechanism is that people from cultures with exposure to domesticated animals tended to have stronger immune systems in general (either because their immune systems had to work harder, or because individuals with weaker immune systems didn't survive childhood). I can't vouch for the argument, but I have previously seen it given as an explanation for why the Colombian exchange had far more of an impact in

          • I don't think that argument is valid. Is there even such a thing as a "stronger" immune system in this context? Maybe stronger in regards to specific diseases. The advantage Europeans had was they were already exposed to the diseases carried by these specific animals, these diseases would not be present in animals on another continent. I believe the English word vaccine comes from the French word for cow, since an early smallpox vaccine was developed from the strain of smallpox present in cows. South Americ
        • One reason the Europeans had all their fun diseases was the greater depth of domestication in their societies, but you're right that keeping llamas wouldn't be expected to help a great deal unless they carried related diseases. It'd be interesting to follow up on to see if there is data to support the idea.
          • That's part of the premise of Guns Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond. He wrote that Europeans had a big advantage during their age of conquest because the large number of domestic animals they had available gave them far more immunity to diseases carried by those animals. Then those diseases caused havok in the Americas.
        • How could llamas help immunize against diseases which didn't exist on the continent?

          People got those diseases in the first place through animal husbandry. (Sometimes a little too liberally applied.) Animals had the precursor diseases before humans even kept animals. Why wouldn't American llamas have them too?

          • It's not a question of why, it's a fact that the llamas didn't have smallpox or other European diseases.
  • by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Sunday November 04, 2018 @11:24PM (#57592082)

    It would also be helpful if:
    - You transported food by llama to the sick
    - You transported medicine by llama to the needy
    - You transported people to the hospital by llama when they can't walk
    - You transported the llama to the dinner table when it falls off a cliff

    --
    When we talk about 'smart transportation,' it is more than moving cargo from A to B. - Soren Skou

  • basic biotechnology (Score:5, Informative)

    by Goldsmith ( 561202 ) on Sunday November 04, 2018 @11:45PM (#57592120)

    I know this sounds exotic and exciting, but the llama angle on this story is basic biotechnology. Llamas (and several other species) make simpler and smaller antibodies than typical mammals. This makes them much easier to work with, sequence, etc. When making a custom antibody, it's not unusual to choose a llama as your "antibody development tool."

    There are llama farms near biotech hubs that do nothing but repeatedly inject llamas with small doses of some protein or molecule and sell the blood (packed with antibodies) back to the pharma and biotech companies.

    The actual neat part of this story is the (slow, but steady) development of a universal influenza vaccine.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    One of the unique benefits associated with creating the vaccine in llamas is they can spit it directly into people's faces instead of requiring pesky injections!

  • Sharing germs to keep their little nanobodies up to date.
    • I'll just use my llama sweater to stay warm and avoid the flu in the oldskool way. That's nothing to sneeze at.
  • One of the research llamas is named Dalai.
  • But your neck will grow really long (not to mention hairy), and you’ll have a constant, irresistible urge to spit all the time.

    • But your neck will grow really long (not to mention hairy), and youâ(TM)ll have a constant, irresistible urge to spit all the time.

      Since that describes 95% of /. readers already, there's no downside.

  • by pablo_max ( 626328 ) on Monday November 05, 2018 @04:53AM (#57592656)

    Seriously, the llamas are not "helping" us do shit. What, did some science guys say, hey llama, can you help us out here and the llama was like.. no problem man.

    It is "how we can use llamas to help us fight the flu".

    Pedantic, I know.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Just don't let a møøse bite your sister!

  • If the Llamas ate all our hands, we couldn't get infected via unwashed hands! Brilliant!
  • ..don't seem so PC now, do they?

  • Get antibodies from the two els. Not the one els

    Bracing for a three el flame war.

    • by twosat ( 1414337 )

      The one-l lama, he's a priest
      The two-l llama, he's a beast
      I will bet a silk pajama
      There isn't any three-l lllama

      Ogden Nash

  • Napoleon Dynamite for this discovery. Turns out feeding Tina all that ham was actually a scientific study...

  • New Marvel Superhero. Geneticlly spliced with Llama DNA by a Mad Scientist in Peru......

    Created to fight disease and drama on the internet!

  • Given that my first name is "Carl," I approve of this discovery.
    I do wear hats, but not a green one.
     

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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