|
Llamas Enlisted to Thwart
Biological Weapons
By Charles Q. Choi
If terrorists ever unleashed a
biological weapon, unusual molecules normally found in the blood of
llamas could quickly help warn of the attack, scientists now report.
Researchers at the U.S. Naval
Research Laboratory in Washington and their colleagues experimented
with antibodies, which act as the red flags and magic bullets of the
body's personal defense arsenal.
Every antibody is a complex protein
tailored to clamp onto a specific target. Immune cells in the blood
and lymph use antibodies either to identify enemies for attacks or
to directly bind to and neutralize intruders.
Scientists now regularly develop
antibodies for use in medicines against cancers and other diseases
or in sensors to warn of dangerous microbes and chemicals.
Unfortunately, the antibodies currently used irreversibly break down
at high temperatures, often limiting extended use in the field.
Biochemist Ellen Goldman at the
Naval Research Laboratory with virologist Andrew Hayhurst at the
Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research and their colleagues
investigated llama antibodies. Past studies revealed that the
binding regions of these antibodies and those from camels and sharks
are unusually small, just one-tenth the size of common human
antibodies.
Llama, camel and shark antibodies
consist just of chains of heavy proteins, missing the additional
lighter protein chains that more complicated antibodies from other
species use. Their relative simplicity makes them more durable,
capable of withstanding temperatures of almost 200 degrees
Fahrenheit.
The researchers generated more than
a billion kinds of antibody binding regions in the laboratory based
on genes taken from small blood samples from llamas. After testing
their antibodies against various biological threats, the researchers
found they could within days successfully identify antibodies
targeting cholera toxin, a smallpox virus surrogate and ricin, among
other known menaces.
"We're interested in the
development of biosensors for biothreats in the field, and hopefully
these antibodies will help lead to more rugged antibodies that have
longer shelf lives and not require refrigeration," Goldman said.
The researchers noted they could
advance their technology to isolate useful antibodies against
emerging threats within hours. Goldman added that while the
antibodies they have tested successfully bind to their targets, they
hope to develop antibodies that bind more strongly. --
LiveScience.com
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|