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ARTICLE | Clinical News

Antibody protects fetuses from Zika in preclinical model

November 8, 2016 12:57 AM UTC

Researchers showed that an antibody reduced viral load in pregnant mice infected with Zika virus, suggesting it could protect fetuses from Zika infection.

In a paper published Monday in Nature, a team led by James Crowe at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Michael Diamond at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis isolated a monoclonal antibody, ZIKV-117, from a human with prior Zika infection and found it "broadly neutralized" the virus in mice infected with Zika. In pregnant mouse models, treatment with ZIKV-117 either before or after Zika infection reduced viral levels in the mother, the placenta and fetal brain; decreased damage to the placenta; and increased offspring body size. These results suggest the antibody could reduce viral transmission from the mother to the fetus and neutralize infection in the fetus...