Researchers at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, in collaboration with colleagues in China, have discovered an antibody-like molecule that can protect mice from various influenza viruses. The findings could pave the way for new treatments and the development of broader influenza vaccines.
We have identified a small molecule that binds to the virus’s surface protein and prevents infection. This molecule, known as E10, belongs to a class of so-called nanobodies. It has shown the ability to protect mice from several influenza strains, including those responsible for seasonal epidemics.”
Davide Angeletti, Associate Professor of Immunology at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, and study’s senior author
Effective against multiple influenza types
The molecule targets a conserved part of the virus’s surface protein shared across various influenza types, including the avian influenza H7N9 and common human influenza viruses such as H1N1 and H3N2. Mice treated with this molecule were protected from infection, and a vaccine based on the same binding site also provided a good degree of protection.
“It’s rare to find a molecule capable of protecting against so many different influenza viruses. We also observed that viruses attempting to mutate to evade the molecule lose their ability to grow effectively, which is a significant advantage”, adds Davide Angeletti.
Although the results are promising, the discovery is still far from being implemented as a treatment or vaccine. Before clinical use, the molecule must be tested in additional animal models and undergo clinical trials to ensure it is both safe and effective.
A global health challenge
Influenza remains a persistent threat to global public health. These viral infections cause seasonal epidemics that lead to hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide each year. This discovery has the potential to contribute to protection during active infections and could also pave the way for vaccines targeting multiple variants of influenza.
The study was conducted in collaboration between researchers in Sweden and China and has been published in the journal Nature Communications. Zhao-Shan Chen, a PhD student from China and the study’s first author, initially isolated the E10 molecule from an alpaca in Professor Qiyun Zhu’s laboratory at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. Chen later continued her work in Davide Angeletti’s lab at the University of Gothenburg, where the molecule’s protective effects against various influenza viruses were tested.
Source:
Journal reference:
Chen, Z.-S., et al. (2025). Influenza A Virus H7 nanobody recognizes a conserved immunodominant epitope on the hemagglutinin head and confers heterosubtypic protection. Nature Communications. doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55193-y.