Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2026

#Genomic #wastewater #surveillance of seasonal and #zoonotic #influenza A viruses in #California during the 2024-2025 flu season

 


Abstract

Wastewater genomic surveillance provides an opportunity to detect human and animal influenza A virus (IAV). We aimed to implement an IAV genomic surveillance framework agnostic to subtype, which enables recovery of IAV from multiple hosts and estimation of proportions across subtypes. We conducted IAV genomic surveillance in wastewater during the 2024-2025 flu season at multiple sites in California and compared these data with available human clinical IAV sequences and test positivity. We applied a custom whole-genome, multi-host IAV probe enrichment panel and adapted our custom expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm to deconvolute IAV mixtures in wastewater and infer subtype relative abundances. Absolute IAV concentrations were quantified using RT-PCR-based assays. H5N1 wastewater and clinical sequences were further characterized by constructing a whole-genome maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree. Finally, we performed variant analysis to examine amino acid substitutions detected in wastewater. Our IAV probe enrichment method and EM algorithm successfully enriched all eight segments of three circulating IAV subtypes and accurately estimated subclade relative abundances for mixed IAV samples. Seasonal human H1N1pdm09 and H3N2 were detected throughout the study period from both wastewater and clinical sequencing data, with H1N1 subclades 6B.1A.5a.2a.1 and 6B.1A.5a.2a co-circulating, and H3N2 dominated by subclade 3C.2a1b.2a.2a.3a.1. Wastewater surveillance consistently detected H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b across three monitored wastewater sites, while clinical H5N1 detections, from anywhere in CA, were sporadic and rare. Whole-genome phylogenetic analysis revealed that wastewater H5N1 sequences clustered with reference sequences associated with dairy cow and avian infections, while all human clinical H5N1 sequences clustered exclusively with reference sequences associated with dairy cow infections. Amino acid substitutions were identified across viral segments, and no mutations associated with mammalian adaptation were observed from wastewater samples.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Source: 


Link: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.10.26355323v1

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Seasonal #vaccine-induced #immunity shows preserved cross-reactivity to #H3N2 subclade K in adults

 


Summary

Background

Influenza A subclade K viruses caused high infection rates in the 2025/2026 Northern Hemisphere season, raising concerns about antigenic drift and reduced vaccine effectiveness.

Methods

We measured antibody responses in matched human pre- and post-vaccination sera, selected from two observational cohort studies of adults, against both a vaccine-like as well as subclade K isolates.

Findings

Pre-existing immunity to subclade K variants was noted with seasonal influenza vaccination further boosting titres two-fold against subclade K and three-fold against the vaccine-like strain, consistent with limited antigenic divergence between subclade K isolates and the vaccine. These findings contrast with ferret-based predictions of marked antigenic drift and align with the observed vaccine effectiveness in adults.

Interpretation

Our results underscore the importance of incorporating human serologic data in influenza surveillance to better inform vaccine strain selection and anticipate vaccine performance in immunologically experienced populations.

Funding

NIAID Centers for Excellence in Influenza Research and Response (75N93021C00014); NIAID VIVA HIPC (U19 AI168631); Mount Sinai Center for Vaccine Research and Pandemic Preparedness; institutional support from the Mount Sinai Center for Vaccine Research and Pandemic Preparedness and the Medical University of Vienna.

Source: 


Link: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/ebiom/article/PIIS2352-3964(26)00203-3/fulltext

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#Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses Research #References (AMEDEO, June 13 '26)

 


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Friday, June 12, 2026

A neutralizing #nanobody targeting a conserved lateral patch on HA1 confers #protection against multiple #H7 avian #influenza viruses

 


ABSTRACT

Human infections with H7 avian influenza viruses (AIVs) have been documented globally, involving multiple subtypes and geographic regions. However, effective therapeutics targeting H7 influenza viruses remain limited. Here, a panel of nanobodies targeting the HA1 domain of hemagglutinin (HA) was identified by yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) screening, and six candidates were subsequently validated to exhibit hemagglutination inhibition (HI) activity. Of these, a subset also displayed virus microneutralization (MN) activity, while all showed binding activity in ELISA assays. Among them, Nb74 exhibited inhibitory activity against four Chinese recombinant vaccine-matched strains (Rv1–Rv4), which were generated based on the HA sequences of the corresponding inactivated vaccine strains H7-Re1 to H7-Re4. The HI-IC50 values were 0.23, 0.57, 3.65, and 43.75 µg/mL, respectively, and the MN-IC50 values for Rv1–Rv3 were 0.02, 0.06, and 1.09 µg/mL. It also retained activity against diverse clinical isolates although HI potency varied among strains. In mouse challenge experiments, intratracheal administration of Nb74 conferred robust protection, achieving 100% and 80% survival against Rv1 and Rv2, respectively, when administered prophylactically (2 mg/kg) or therapeutically (4 mg/kg). Treated mice showed accelerated body weight recovery, reduced lung viral load, and alleviated pulmonary pathology. Mechanistic analyses indicated that Nb74 neutralizes virus by blocking viral attachment to the host. Furthermore, combined hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) with escape mutant analysis mapped its epitope to a conserved lateral patch on the HA1 subunit, consistent with a conformational epitope. Overall, these results demonstrate the therapeutic promise of intratracheally delivered Nb74 and provide insights for H7 AIVs vaccine design.

Source: 


Link: https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/jvi.00563-26

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Immunogenicity and safety of AS03-adjuvanted A/Astrakhan/3212/2020 #H5N8 -like #influenza #vaccine in adults: Phase 1/2, observer-blinded, randomized trial

 


ABSTRACT

Influenza pandemics arise from novel influenza A viruses. Recent emergence of a new clade (2.3.4.4.b) of the highly pathogenic H5N1 in animals and humans highlighted its pandemic potential. We evaluated the immunogenicity and safety of GSK’s AS03-adjuvanted H5N8 vaccine in adults. In this phase 1/2, observer-blinded, age-stratified, randomized trial, healthy US adults (age, ≥18 y) received two intramuscular doses of hemagglutinin antigen (3.75 or 7.50 μg) with AS03A or AS03B, administered 21 d apart. Immunogenicity – seroprotection rates (SPRs), seropositivity, geometric mean titers (GMTs), geometric mean fold rise (GMFR), and seroconversion rates (SCRs) – was evaluated on day 43 using hemagglutination inhibition (HI) and microneutralization (MN) assays. Safety was monitored throughout the study. Of 520 enrolled participants, 518 were vaccinated. On day 43, the US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research criteria for influenza vaccines were met. HI SPRs, seropositivity rates, SCRs, GMTs, and GMFR appeared to be higher in the AS03A vs AS03B group. Immune responses were generally higher in younger (aged 18–64 y) vs older (aged ≥65 y) adults. Immune responses were also detected in MN assays, with a correlation between HI and MN responses on day 43 across age groups and vaccine formulations. Safety was acceptable, with no increase in adverse events post-dose 2. Reactogenicity appeared more common in younger adults. The antigen-sparing potential of AS03 was demonstrated, with an acceptable safety profile. The benefit/risk profile was favorable for all formulations tested, including 3.75 µg AS03A (licensed in the US).


ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT05975840.

Source: 


Link: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21645515.2026.2649314

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Thursday, June 11, 2026

Seasonal #influenza versus #COVID19 #hospitalisation #risk during the 2025–26 influenza season

 


{Excerpt}

(...)

Contemporary surveillance data have shown higher population rates of influenza infections and hospitalisations during the 2025–26 influenza season; however, these aggregate metrics cannot disentangle infection frequency from disease severity. This analysis extends that evidence by comparing outcomes on a per-infection basis among patients with multiplex-based, laboratory-confirmed infection, showing that seasonal influenza was associated with a 43% higher risk of hospitalisation than COVID-19, corresponding to approximately 48 additional hospitalisations per 1000 infected individuals. The higher severity associated with seasonal influenza during this season likely reflects a combination of factors, including the increased virulence of circulating influenza strains, mismatch between vaccine composition and dominant circulating influenza variants, and the continued attenuation of SARS-CoV-2 severity over successive waves.

(...)

Source: 


Link: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(26)00289-6/fulltext?rss=yes

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#Neurological Manifestations in Adult #Survivors of #Ebola Virus Disease

 


Key Points

    ° Question

        - What neurological symptoms are present in adult survivors of Ebola virus disease (EVD) and how long are they present after infection?

    ° Findings:  

        - In this cohort study conducted in Liberia including 148 EVD survivors and 81 control individuals, survivors had a wide range of neurological symptoms during acute EVD (including headaches, altered mental status, and meningitis symptoms) and numerous neurological sequelae in convalescence (including headaches, memory loss, and neurological examination abnormalities). Seven years later, most survivors’ symptoms and findings had improved, but many still had neurological symptoms, most notably memory loss.

    ° Meaning:  

        - The findings indicate that many neurological symptoms, including those that can affect quality of life and socioeconomic burden, were associated with EVD, warranting close neurological follow-up of EVD survivors.


Abstract

Importance  

    Ebola virus disease (EVD) causes multiorgan damage and is highly fatal. EVD’s neurological impact among survivors remains poorly characterized due to limited neurological assessment capabilities in the remote regions where most outbreaks occur.

Objective  

    To characterize neurological sequelae in EVD survivors over more than 7 years’ longitudinal follow-up.

Design, Setting, and Participants  

    Under the Ebola Natural History Study (PREVAIL III; PIII), the Neurology Study of PIII was a prospective longitudinal cohort study in Liberia of adult Ebola survivors and control individuals conducted from September 2015 to March 2023 at the Partnership for Research on Vaccines and Infectious Diseases in Liberia (PREVAIL) site at John F. Kennedy Medical Center in Monrovia, Liberia. Data were analyzed from April 2023 to September 2025.

Exposures  

    Neurological evaluations were performed by trained neurologists biannually. Questionnaire and neurological examination data were collected on case report forms.

Main Outcomes and Measures  

    Neurological symptom prevalence and neurological examination scores were compared to those of control individuals. Tests for differences between survivors and control individuals were conducted using generalized linear mixed-effects models controlling for age and sex. Overdispersed Poisson models were used to test for computed neurological examination score differences. Neurological examination scores were developed for this study, representing the cumulative abnormalities on neurological examinations, denoted on standardized case report forms, with the general neurological examination score representing all examination abnormalities and the central nervous system score representing the central nervous system–specific abnormalities on examination.

Results  

    Analysis after serologic testing included 148 Ebola antibody-positive survivors (mean [SD] age, 34.8 [10.5] years; 74 [50%] female) and 81 antibody-negative contacts (mean [SD] age, 35.8 [12.6] years; 41 [51%] female). During acute infection, survivors reported headaches, altered mental status, and strokelike symptoms or meningoencephalitis (rarely). Survivors had significant neurological sequelae involving the entire neuraxis: cognitive dysfunction (83 [56.1%]), persistent headaches (98 [66.2%]), sleep abnormalities (40 [27.0%]), depression (73 [49.3%]), sexual dysfunction (48 [32.4%]), tremor (18 [20.3%]), fatigue (71 [51.1%]), cranial nerve abnormalities (60 [40.5%]), and sensory abnormalities (45 [30.4%]). Over 7 years’ follow-up, most survivors demonstrated improvement in neurological status. The final visit included 115 survivors (77.7%) and 61 close contacts (75.3%). Persistent symptoms at final evaluation in survivors compared to contacts were memory loss (66 [57.4%] vs 16 [26.2%], respectively; P < .001), irritability (42 [36.5%] vs 9 [14.8%], respectively; P = .006), and trouble concentrating (34 [29.6%] vs 6 [9.8%], respectively; P = .002).

Conclusions and Relevance  

    The findings indicate that Ebola virus infection is associated with neurological complications in survivors, with increased health care burden and socioeconomic consequences. These neurological issues generally improved with time, but some persisted long-term. Close neurological follow-up of EVD survivors may be warranted.

Source: 


Link: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/fullarticle/2850237#251071811

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Evaluation of #antiviral #treatments for highly pathogenic avian #influenza virus #infections in #feline species

 


Abstract

In 2020, highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) isolates from clade 2.3.4.4b emerged in Europe and spread globally, including in bovine hosts in the USA. Viruses from this clade cause minimal disease in dairy cattle, characterized by decreased milk production but low mortality rates. Infections have also occurred in feline hosts. In contrast to cows, infection of cats (and closely related species, including skunks and foxes) can result in severe neurological signs and mortality. Documented feline H5N1 infections from clade 2.3.4.4.b have a mortality rate of approximately 80% following rapid onset of clinical signs. No antiviral compounds have been tested in an experimental feline model; however, anecdotal clinical evidence suggests early treatment with oseltamivir may improve outcomes in felines with HPAI. Here, we show the in vitro efficacy of several influenza inhibitors in feline glial astrocyte (PG-4) and kidney (CRFK) cell culture models using the clade 2.3.4.4.b virus Tx2/24 (H5N1). The neuraminidase inhibitor oseltamivir carboxylate did not effectively inhibit viral replication in either cell line. The cap-dependent endonuclease inhibitor baloxavir exhibited the strongest inhibition of this virus, with EC50 values of 30 nM in PG-4 and 1 μM in CRFK cells. Amantadine and rimantadine, M2 ion channel inhibitors, were unable to completely inhibit viral replication in either cell line at any concentration utilized. The broad-spectrum nucleoside analog GS-441524 demonstrated little to no inhibition of viral replication in either cell line. Additionally, the mutagenic NHC analogs EIDD-1931 and EIDD-2801 successfully inhibited viral replication at the maximum tested concentration of 100 μM but exhibited significant cytotoxicity. Our findings suggest that baloxavir should be considered by veterinary clinicians as the first-line drug of choice when presented with felines or other species infected with HPAI.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Funder Information Declared

Cornell Feline Health Center, Ithaca, US

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.09.730954v1

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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

#Antigenic mapping of #H2 #influenza viruses recognized by #ferret and #human sera and predicting antigenically significant sites

 


ABSTRACT

Influenza viruses cause hundreds of thousands of infections globally every year. In the past century, seasonal influenza viruses have included H1N1, H2N2, and H3N2 strains. H2N2 influenza viruses circulated in the human population between 1957 and 1968. Previously, our group demonstrated a lack of H2N2 influenza virus immunity in individuals born after 1968, as well as the effectiveness of hemagglutinin (HA)-based vaccines for multiple influenza virus subtypes. In this study, H2 antigenic maps and radial graphs were generated using previously published data from H2 HA vaccinations of ferrets and seasonal influenza vaccinations of humans. The antigenic maps revealed a stark difference in the clustering of HA antigens between ferrets and humans, and the radial graphs showed that specific antigen recognition varies greatly among different influenza preimmune ferrets. These maps also revealed the significant impact that different pre-existing immunities have on antigenic recognition and clustering of antigens after vaccine boost. From these data, we predicted two possible antigenically significant sites containing various mutations that have not been previously reported, and showed that one of these sites is relevant using mouse antisera.

Source: 


Link: https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/msphere.00022-26

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Regional #Signals Preceding the 2026 #Bundibugyo Virus Disease #Outbreak

 


Highlights

    • Bundibugyo virus circulated undetected for months prior to outbreak declaration.

    • Four earlier regional hemorrhagic fever clusters flagged by open surveillance are unresolved.

    • These clusters warrant urgent reanalysis due to concern for regional spread.


Abstract

Background

The May 2026 Bundibugyo virus disease (BVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern after substantial undetected community transmission. We describe regional surveillance signals detected by the Biothreats Emergence, Analysis, and Communications Network (BEACON), our open access event based surveillance program, in the weeks preceding outbreak declaration.

Methods

We reviewed BEACON reports of VHF-compatible illness clusters detected in the transboundary DRC-Uganda-Burundi-South Sudan region during March–April 2026, prior to the May 15 laboratory confirmation of BDBV.

Results

BEACON detected four temporally proximal VHF-compatible illness signals: (1) March 9, North Kivu Province—suspected Ebola case under investigation with unresolved laboratory results; (2) March 10, KasaĂ¯ Province—fatal hemorrhagic illness with secondary cases and negative Ebola PCR; (3) March 30, Burundi—35-case undiagnosed cluster near the DRC border with 5 deaths, negative testing for major filoviruses and >200 pathogens, pending metagenomic sequencing; (4) April 22, South Sudan—three suspected VHF cases with negative initial testing. All four signals shared a similar diagnostic phenotype: VHF-compatible presentation, mobilization of investigation teams, negative initial testing, and no publicly reported confirmed etiology. None were formally reported to have been resolved.

Conclusions

Our detection of four unresolved VHF signals preceding the confirmed BDBV outbreak highlights gaps in formal follow-up mechanisms for negative cases and fragmented regional diagnostic coordination. In light of confirmed BDBV circulation and Africa CDC's identification of 10 countries at high risk for spread, these preceding signals warrant urgent retrospective investigation and laboratory.

Source: 


Link: https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(26)00497-2/fulltext

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#Estimation of the #Ebola #outbreak size in the #DRC

 


{Excerpt}

    The ongoing outbreak of Bundibugyo virus disease, a form of Ebola virus disease caused by the Bundibugyo virus, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is evolving rapidly. As of May 27, 2026, 1031 suspected or confirmed cases of Bundibugyo virus disease had been reported from 14 health zones across three provinces (Ituri, Nord Kivu, and Sud Kivu) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, including 240 suspected or confirmed deaths.1 Testing has rapidly expanded for routine and retrospective assessment of suspected cases (381 confirmed cases as of June 3, 2026). Deaths are harder to retrospectively assess, with investigations ongoing (64 confirmed deaths as of June 3, 2026). Suspected cases and deaths are no longer reported in recent situation reports.2 An additional 16 cases were confirmed in Uganda, as of June 4, 2026,3 with three of those among individuals travelling from Ituri, the Democratic Republic of the Congo.4,5 Together, these observations suggest that the epidemic has been larger than ascertained; however, the true magnitude remains uncertain. Estimating the outbreak size is important to assess the scale of this public health threat and appropriately calibrate surveillance and response efforts.

(...)

Source: 


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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Cryo-EM structures of #Měnglà virus GP reveal combined #Ebola- and #Marburg-like epitope masking strategies for #antibody evasion

 


Abstract

Ebola virus (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV) are highly lethal filoviruses that cause severe hemorrhagic fever in humans. A recently identified bat-borne filovirus, Měnglà virus (MLAV), uses the same NPC1 receptor as EBOV and MARV, raising concerns about its potential cross-species transmission. Here, we report cryo-EM structures of the MLAV surface glycoprotein (GP) in its unbound form and in complex with the MARV-neutralizing antibody MR191. MLAV GP exhibits distinctive structural features in the Wing and heptad repeat 1D (HR1D) regions, retains a visible Cap structure even after protease treatment, and contains a MARV GP-like α2 helix. MR191, a broadly neutralizing marburgvirus antibody that targets the conserved NPC1 receptor-binding pocket in MLAV GP, nonetheless exhibits impaired neutralizing activity, likely due to shielding by the MLAV Cap. In addition, the MLAV mucin-like domain, α2 helix, and HR1A region hinder binding by representative broadly neutralizing ebolavirus antibodies targeting the GP-waist, including 6D6, CA45, ADI-15878, and ADI-15946. Together, these results provide the first structural insights into MLAV GP and identify immune evasion driven by structural and sequence divergence as a major challenge for pan-filovirus antibody development.

Source: 


Link: https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2529436123?af=R

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Egyptian rousette #bat humoral #immunity to #H9 #influenza hemagglutinin

 


Abstract

In mammals, antibodies are central to antiviral defense, but they can also impose selective pressure that drives viral evolution. The interplay between viral antigenic variation and host antibody diversification constitutes a molecular arms race that influences pathogenicity, transmission, and spillover risk. Bats are reservoirs for zoonotic viruses with pandemic potential yet they appear to tolerate infection without overt disease. Although distinctive features of bat innate immunity have been described, the role of adaptive immunity, particularly antibody-mediated responses, remains largely undefined. Moreover, how antibody evolutionary pressure operates in bats is unknown, in part because tools to interrogate bat B cell responses at the monoclonal level are limited. Here, we developed a yeast surface display library of bat antibodies derived from splenic RNA of wild-caught Egyptian rousette bats to interrogate humoral responses to the bat-derived H9 influenza hemagglutinin. We isolated monoclonal antibodies recognizing the hemagglutinin (HA) antigen and defined their gene usage, somatic hypermutation frequency, binding affinities, and breadth. We then used cryo-EM to structurally characterize three bat antibodies in complex with HA engaging distinct antigenic sites. Together, these data enable direct comparison with human anti-influenza antibodies highlighting similarities in humoral immunity across mammals and provides a tool to examine bat antibody responses to other potential zoonotic viruses.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.04.730146v1

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Could #bradykinin #pathway inhibition change the course of severe #hantavirus disease?

 


Highlights

    • Hantavirus triggers the kallikrein–kinin system, driving severe capillary leak.

    • In vitro data show that bradykinin directly disrupts endothelial barrier function.

    • Two clinical cases support targeting the bradykinin pathway with icatibant.


Abstract

A recent multi-country hantavirus outbreak associated with a cruise ship underscores the urgent need to understand the mechanisms driving severe vascular leakage and multi-organ failure. While disease severity is largely attributed to a dysregulated host immune response and intense cytokine surge, the precise molecular mediators remain incompletely defined. Laboratory evidence indicates that hantavirus infection activates the factor XII–dependent kallikrein–kinin system, leading to elevated bradykinin production and subsequent endothelial barrier dysfunction. This translational mechanism is tentatively supported by two clinical case reports where severe hantavirus infections were successfully treated with the bradykinin receptor antagonist icatibant. We hypothesize that exaggerated bradykinin signalling drives the vascular leak phenotype, making the kallikrein–kinin pathway a compelling therapeutic target. Ultimately, effectively combating hantavirus-induced vascular permeability may require a multi-faceted approach combining targeted bradykinin inhibition with broader immunomodulatory strategies.

Source: 


Link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S016524782600074X?via%3Dihub

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Saturday, June 6, 2026

#Bundibugyo virus disease #outbreak in #DRC: current #trajectory and potential #risk for a Pandemic Emergency

 


{Excerpt}

On May 15, 2026, DR Congo declared the 17th orthoebolavirus disease outbreak—the third in the country in two decades caused by the Bundibugyo virus variant (Orthoebolavirus bundibugyoense)—in the conflict affected north-eastern province of Ituri.1 The next day, the WHO Director-General determined this event a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) and on May 18, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared a Public Health Emergency of Continental Security.2 10 days earlier, WHO received an alert about a cluster of unexplained deaths, including deaths among health workers, in the Mongbwalu Health Zone. Initial laboratory results were negative for orthoebolavirus and reagents from Ituri were reasonably provisioned for Ebola virus.1

(...)

Source: 


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#Human ACE2‑specific benzothiazole-based allosteric #inhibitor against pan ‑ #sarbecoviruses

 


Abstract

Emerging SARS‑CoV‑2 variants and related zoonotic sarbecoviruses rely on ACE2 for cell entry, motivating host‑directed antivirals that block spike-ACE2 interaction. Here, we characterize MB‑32, a benzothiazole small molecule that binds ACE2, selectively disrupts binding of SARS‑CoV‑2 spike receptor‑binding domain to ACE2, and preserves ACE2 enzymatic activity across species. MB‑32 potently inhibits entry of SARS‑CoV‑2 variants, SARS‑CoV‑1 and diverse bat/pangolin sarbecoviruses in ACE2‑expressing cells, while sparing vesicular stomatitis virus and authentic MERS‑CoV, indicating non‑virucidal, ACE2‑focused activity. Biochemical and biophysical analyses, supported by ACE2 mutagenesis, support a model in which MB‑32 engages a non‑catalytic surface pocket on the ACE2 N‑terminal helix to allosterically disrupt spike attachment. Intranasal MB‑32 achieves high airway concentrations, protects male ACE2‑transgenic mice and hamsters from SARS‑CoV‑2 disease, and prevents contact transmission of Omicron‑lineage viruses without detectable cardiovascular toxicity. These findings establish MB‑32 as a host‑targeted ACE2 entry inhibitor and provide a framework for small‑molecule ACE2‑directed antivirals against current and future sarbecovirus spillovers.

Source: 


Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-73944-x

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Cross-reactive #Bundibugyo #antibody responses after licensed #Ebola #vaccines

 


Abstract

Background 

The ongoing Bundibugyo virus disease (BDBV) outbreak in Central Africa highlights the absence of approved vaccines specifically targeting BDBV. Whether licensed Zaire ebolavirus (EBOV) vaccines induce cross-reactive immunity against BDBV remains largely unknown.

Methods 

We performed an immunogenicity analysis using serum samples from participants enrolled in the PREVAC randomized clinical trial evaluating licensed Ebola vaccine strategies in West Africa. Samples collected at day 28 (D28) and month 3 (M3) following vaccination with rVSVΔG-ZEBOV-GP or Ad26.ZEBOV/MVA-BN-Filo were assessed using a multiplex Luminex assay against glycoproteins from multiple filoviruses, including EBOV Kikwit, EBOV Mayinga, BDBV, Sudan virus, Reston virus, and Marburg virus.

Results 

A total of 179 samples were analysed. Detectable cross-reactive antibody responses against BDBV were observed across vaccine groups, timepoints, and age categories. However, BDBV responses remained substantially lower than homologous EBOV responses. In rVSV recipients, median BDBV responses (net MFI) reached 282 (IQR 164–644) at D28 compared with 1788 (832–3311) against the homologous Kikwit antigen. Similar patterns were observed following rVSV booster vaccination and Ad26.ZEBOV/MVA-BN-Filo vaccination. The heterologous Ad26/MVA regimen demonstrated increasing BDBV responses between D28 and M3.

Conclusions 

Licensed EBOV vaccines induced detectable but quantitatively reduced cross-reactive antibody responses against BDBV. Although no direct assessment of vaccine efficacy against BDBV disease was possible, these findings support the plausibility of partial heterologous immunity following EBOV vaccination. In the absence of approved BDBV-specific vaccines, these data support the urgent evaluation of currently available Ebola vaccines during BDBV outbreaks and reinforce the importance of developing broadly protective pan-filovirus vaccines.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Clinical Trial

NCT02876328

Source: 


Link: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.05.27.26354223v1

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The #canine respiratory #epithelium is a permissive #ecosystem for #influenza interspecies #transmission and emergence

 


Abstract

The outcome of virus spillover ranges from dead-end infections to pandemics and is underpinned by host-pathogen interactions as well as evolutionary and epidemiological processes. The emergence of novel influenza A viruses (IAVs) has been associated with reassortment events involving multiple species, highlighting the importance of reservoir and intermediate hosts in viral emergence. Highly pathogenic H5N1 IAVs of the 2.3.4.4b genotype have caused a panzootic affecting a broad range of mammals. The role of dogs -arguably the most popular companion animal and a natural host of IAVs- in the ecology of IAVs under this new zooepidemiological scenario is unknown. To address this, we characterised the glycome of the dog respiratory epithelium, infected canine tracheal explants with multiple IAVs (including canine H3N2 and H3N8, equine H3N8, avian H3N8 and H5N1, swine H1N1, human H1N1 and H3N2, and bovine H5N1 viruses), and determined their cellular tropism. We show that the respiratory tract of dogs presents abundant sialylated glycans known to act as IAV receptors. Further, most IAVs (including 2.3.4.4b viruses) infected and replicated in dog tracheas, targeting mainly ciliated cells. Serological testing showed evidence of influenza spillover infections in dogs from the UK. Overall, our results show that the canine respiratory tract can provide a suitable environment for the generation of new IAVs. Given the multi-host contact networks of dogs in nature, they could act as recipients, bridging hosts, and/or mixing vessels for multiple IAV lineages, playing a central role in the ecology of influenza emergence.


Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.


Funder Information Declared

Medical Research Council, https://ror.org/03x94j517, MR/Y03368X/1, MC_UU_0034/2, MC_UU_0034/3

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, BB/Y007093/1, BB/Y007298/1, BBS/E/PI/230001A, BBS/E/PI/230002A, BBS/E/PI/230002B, BBS/E/PI/230001C

Source: 


Link: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.04.730051v1

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