"The vaccine is doing everything we expected and that is only good
news in our fight against the illness," said David Matthews, an
expert in virology from Bristol University, who led the research.
AstraZeneca, which is developing the vaccine with Oxford University
researchers, is seen as a frontrunner in the race to produce a
vaccine to protect against COVID-19.
The first data from late-stage large-scale clinical trials being
conducted in several countries around the world, including Brazil,
the United States and Britain, are expected to be released before
the end of the year.
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The vaccine - known either as ChAdOx1 or AZD1222 - is made by taking
a common cold virus called an adenovirus from chimpanzees and
deleting about 20% of the virus’s instructions. This means it is
impossible for the vaccine to replicate or cause disease in humans.
The Bristol researchers’ focus was to assess how often and how
accurately the vaccine is copying and using the genetic instructions
programmed into it by its designers. These instructions detail how
to make the spike protein from the coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2 that
causes COVID-19.
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Once the spike protein is made, the immune system reacts to it, training the
immune system to identify a real COVID-19 infection.
"This is an important study as we are able to confirm that the genetic
instructions underpinning this vaccine ... are correctly followed when they get
into a human cell," Matthews said in a statement about the work.
His team's research was not peer reviewed by other scientists, but was published
as a preprint before review.
(Reporting by Sarah Young and Kate Kelland, editing by Alistair Smout)
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