Tag Archives: flu strain

New influenza vaccine in development

Just a single dose of a vaccine being developed by Medicago, Inc., a publicly traded biopharmaceutical company, could protect against not only the avian influenza (H5N1) strain it was designed for, but also another H5N1 strain and a strain of a different flu subtype, called H2N2, researchers have found.

This phenomenon, known as “cross-protection,” is highly desirable in an influenza vaccine, especially when the threat of a pandemic influenza outbreak looms. That’s because influenza strains often mutate, rendering stockpiled vaccines ineffective.

Medicago has a special advantage in this regard, because the company can rapidly produce a vaccine in less than a month after the identification of a flu strain. This speed results from Medicago’s use of entities known as virus-like particles (VLPs) to create its vaccines.

Medicago is a worldwide leader in the development of VLP vaccines using a transient expression system, which produces recombinant vaccine antigens in plants. The accelerated production time frame gives the potential to vaccinate the general public before the first wave of a pandemic.

Flu vaccination

Flu vaccination

In the study, researchers gave mice a single dose of Medicago’s H5N1 VLP vaccine formulated for the Indonesia H5N1 Influenza virus. After 28 days, the mice were given a lethal dose of either the Vietnam H5N1 strain or an H2N2 Influenza virus strain that caused a pandemic in humans in the late 1950s.


The study found Medicago’s vaccine protected 100 percent of mice from the Vietnam strain and 70 percent of mice from the H2N2 strain.

In the past, the company has completed Phase I and Phase II human clinical trials for its vaccine for the Indonesia H5N1 Influenza virus, demonstrating that that vaccine produced a solid immune response and was safe and well tolerated.

If further studies support this result, there is a possibility that Medicago’s vaccine could offer cross-protection to the general public-perhaps keeping many of us safer from a rapidly mutating menace during the next flu pandemic.

Universal vaccine for flu based on natural resistance

Some people have a natural resistance to all flu strains, according to British scientists who believe the finding will enable them to create a universal vaccine.

By infecting 41 healthy volunteers with different strains, they found those with higher levels of a specific type of white blood cell were less likely to develop severe illness.

Researchers hope to mimic the natural resistance shown by some of the volunteers, by creating a vaccine that boosts levels of a particular subset of the ‘T-cells’.

These cells, found researchers at Oxford and Southampton universities and Retroscreen Virology, are able to identify proteins, called peptides, that are found inside almost all known flu viruses. Results of the study are published in Nature Medicine.

Dr Tom Wilkinson, from Southampton University, said the study was the first to cleanly “map” individuals’ immune response, by infecting them and then keeping them “quarantined” in sterile conditions.

Flu virus

Flu virus

He said: “If we can expand the population of these T-cells in people using a vaccine, which is perfectly feasible, we could protect against all flu strains.”


Several institutes around the world are trying to develop a universal vaccine, conscious of the looming threat that the H5N1 avian flu strain could mutate and start spreading from human to human.

However, most are looking at identifying antibodies that bind to relatively unchanging sites on the virus, rather than the body’s cellular response. Current vaccines only work for a few seasons because they stimulate antibodies which attach to sites on the shells of viruses, which mutate rapidly.