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Ebola vaccine works fast in monkey test.


A one-shot version of a vaccine against Ebola fever provides protection after just 1 month, tests in monkeys show. If it proves safe to use in people, the fast-acting vaccine, deployed promptly, might help contain future Ebola outbreaks, scientists say in the Aug. 7 Nature.

Ebola is a highly contagious and often lethal viral infection. Including the first cases reported in 1976, nine outbreaks have sickened or killed hundreds of people in central Africa, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
) in Atlanta. Wild primates are also susceptible.

Earlier, researchers tested a vaccine that entails three injections of Ebola DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 over 2 months, followed 12 weeks later by a booster shot of an adenovirus adenovirus

Any of a group of spheroidal viruses, made up of DNA wrapped in a protein coat, that cause sore throat and fever in humans, hepatitis in dogs, and several diseases in fowl, mice, cattle, pigs, and monkeys.
 modified to carry genes for Ebola virus proteins. The adenovirus cannot replicate, but the Ebola proteins it makes grab the attention of the immune system, which were primed by the earlier exposure to Ebola DNA (SN: 12/2/00, p. 358).

While that two-step vaccine fostered impressive immunity in monkeys, it took several months to take hold, says Gary J. Nabel, a virologist virologist

microbiologist specializing in virology.
 at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md.

For the typical Ebola outbreak, that's too slow, he says. So, Nabel and his colleagues injected eight cynomolgus macaque macaque (məkäk`), name for Old World monkeys of the genus Macaca, related to mangabeys, mandrills, and baboons. All but one of the 19 species are found in Asia from Afghanistan to Japan, the Philippines, and Borneo.  monkeys with an intramuscular intramuscular /in·tra·mus·cu·lar/ (-mus´ku-ler) within the muscular substance.

in·tra·mus·cu·lar
adj. Abbr. IM
Within a muscle.
 shot of the genetoting adenovirus. As a control group, five monkeys received an inert injection. A month after being vaccinated, the monkeys were injected with live Ebola virus.

All eight vaccinated animals survived; the other five monkeys died.

"This is real progress," says virologist Joseph B. McCormick of the University of Texas Health Science Center in Brownsville. "The difference is quite clear between the controls and the vaccinated animals" in virus concentrations in the blood, as well as in overall survival.

Nabel hopes to test both vaccine strategies on people by the end of 2004. If a single-shot adenovirus vaccine proves safe to administer and engenders a potent immune defense, it might be useful in a ring-vaccination approach, he says. Vaccinations would be given to people exposed to an infected person and also to others who spend time with those contacts.

While the vaccine appears "quite promising," it may not work in immune-compromised people with HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. , a group that includes a vast population in central Africa, says immunologist Manisha Gupta of the CDC.

Also, the time between exposure to the virus and the onset of Ebola fever's flulike symptoms and internal hemorrhaging is 7 to 21 days. Nabel says that animal tests are needed to reveal whether the vaccine derails Ebola virus if given during this time.

Ebola has a knack for popping up without warning, making it a public health nightmare, says William B. Karesh, a veterinarian veterinarian /vet·er·i·nar·i·an/ (vet?er-i-nar´e-an) a person trained and authorized to practice veterinary medicine and surgery; a doctor of veterinary medicine.

vet·er·i·nar·i·an
n.
 at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS See Windows CardSpace. ) in Bronx, N.Y. In an attempt to predict where new outbreaks will occur, WCS is training officials in central Africa to monitor deaths in wild primates and, when possible, to analyze the carcasses--using extreme precautions. Infected ape carcasses were found near the sites of two of Gabon's four outbreaks seen since 1994, WCS biologist David S. Wilkie and his colleagues reported earlier this year. The outbreaks may have started after people ate infected ape meat.

Vaccinating wild gorillas and chimpanzees might seem a good way to slow the spread of Ebola but would be virtually impossible, says Wilkie. "Even trying to dart gorillas is hard," he says, much less delivering an intramuscular injection.
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Title Annotation:Virus Shield
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 9, 2003
Words:573
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