Hope for an RSV vaccine

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and its close relative, human metapneumovirus (hMPV), are leading causes of lower respiratory tract infections in infants and children yet there are no licensed vaccines available to prevent these viral infections.

Attempts to develop an effective vaccine have been focused on a highly conserved viral protein called the fusion or F protein. When activated, the protein achieves infection by triggering fusion of viral and cell membranes in the lung.

Several antibodies that bind the F protein have been isolated previously. Using blood samples from healthy donors, Jarrod Mousa, PhD, James Crowe, Jr., MD, and colleagues generated four new monoclonal antibodies that are specific to the site IV region of the RSV F protein.

For more information on the RSV vaccine, click here