Singapore scientists study genes to fast-track coronavirus vaccine
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[March 25, 2020]
By Aradhana Aravindan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Scientists in
Singapore say they have developed a way to track genetic changes that
speeds testing of vaccines against a coronavirus that has killed more
than 16,000 people worldwide.
The scientists, at the city-state's Duke-NUS Medical School, say their
technique needs just days to evaluate potential vaccines provided by
Arcturus Therapeutics, an American biotech firm the school has partnered
with for the trials.
That timeframe compares with the months usually required for testing
based on human responses.
"You can know from the way the genes change - what genes are turned on,
what are turned off," said Ooi Eng Eong, deputy director of the school's
emerging infectious diseases program.
Swift assessment of such changes triggered by a vaccine allows the
scientists to determine its effectiveness and side effects, instead of
relying solely on responses from humans who receive it, he added.
Currently, there are no approved medicines or preventive vaccines
targeting the virus, with most patients receiving only supportive care,
such as help with their breathing. Experts have said getting a vaccine
ready could take a year or more.
Ooi said he planned to start testing vaccines in mice in about a week,
with human trials expected in the second half of the year.
Pharmaceutical firms and researchers around the globe are racing to
develop vaccines and treatments for the virus, which has infected more
than 377,000 people.
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A researcher works in a lab at the Duke-NUS Medical School, which is
developing a way to track genetic changes that speed testing of
vaccines against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Singapore
March 23, 2020. REUTERS/Joseph Campbell
These efforts include Gilead Sciences Inc's experimental antiviral
drug remdesivir and a plasma-derived therapy from Japan's Takeda
Pharmaceutical Co.
In a key step towards developing diagnostic methods, the Duke-NUS
scientists helped culture the virus in late January, days after
Singapore confirmed its first infection. That made it the third
country, outside China, to culture the virus.
Another first was a test to detect virus antibodies even in those
who had already recovered, crucial in containment efforts that have
won global praise for Singapore.
From discovery to licensing, vaccine development in the past could
take more than 10 years, but Ooi said science can now offer a much
faster response.
"Everyone is racing ahead, but we are kind of writing the playbook
as the game is being played," he added.
(Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan in Singapore; Editing by John
Geddie and Clarence Fernandez)
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