Vipin M. Vashishtha Profile picture
Mar 19 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
A NEW study finds that H5N1 influenza viral lineages are beginning to evade human immunological defenses. This indicates current and future H5N1 viral lineages pose a greater risk to human health—including the possibility of increased transmission in humans. 1/ Image
This new computational modeling of avian influenza variants' immunoprotein interactions reveals the H5N1 influenza virus is evolving to escape immunological defenses raised by previous infection or vaccination in mammals. 2/ Image
This rapid adaptation means that if one makes an H5N1 vaccine with a previous vaccine candidate virus, the vaccine will have less efficacy, based on the measurements of how much the virus has evolved in recent years. 3/ Image
The continuous transmission of H5N1 from birds to mammals and the increase in strains with immuno-evasive HA in mammals sampled over time suggest that antigenic drift is a source of zoonotic risk. 4/ Image
Using high-performance computational modeling, the researchers documented a trend of weakening binding affinity of a wide variety of existing antibodies, collected from vaccinated and or infected hosts, against H5 viral isolates over time. 5/ Image
In assessing the possible pandemic risk spurred by H5 bird flu spread and mutation, global researchers agree that the avian virus remains high on lists of potential pandemic agents. 6/ Image
As of today, no human-to-human transmission has been reported. However, cattle in at least 17 states have tested positive for H5N1 in addition to millions of cases among wild birds, small mammals, commercial chickens, and other flocks. 7/ Image
Between January 2022 and March 2025, the CDC reported:
-12,510 outbreaks among wild birds in U.S.
-51 jurisdictions w/ bird flu among wild birds.
-166,417,923 poultry affected
-70 human cases of H5N1, one fatal, in the U.S. 8/

cdc.gov/bird-flu/situa…
The H5N1 virus, according to the World Health Organization, has killed 466 people worldwide since January 2003. 9/ Image
Speed important to respond to fast-evolving viral threat!

Vaccines will likely be a crucial tool in controlling a bird flu pandemic, as mutations of viral lineages adapt to new mammal hosts. 10/10

thelancet.com/journals/ebiom…Image

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More from @vipintukur

Mar 17
Researchers find that severe COVID-19 can disrupt peroxisomes in macrophages, an immune cell type specialized in engulfing cellular debris and pathogens. This disruption led to impaired lung repair, prolonged inflammation, and chronic fibrosis. 1/ Image
Peroxisomes are small, membrane-bound structures within cells that play a crucial role in synthesizing and breaking down fat. 2/ Image
In mouse models of viral infection, enhancing peroxisome function with the FDA-approved drug sodium 4-phenylbutyrate (4-PBA) improved lung healing, reduced inflammation & fibrosis, and enhanced alveolar regeneration, mitigating both acute symptoms and post-acute sequelae 3/ Image
Read 7 tweets
Mar 12
What causes MIS-C in children?

Researchers have identified that reactivation of a pre-existing, dormant infection with the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) triggers an excessive inflammatory response. 1/ Image
They establish a connection between SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 sequelae in children, in which impaired T cell cytotoxicity triggered by TGFβ overproduction leads to EBV reactivation and subsequent hyperinflammation. 2/ Image
MIS-C is a serious inflammatory shock that affects children. It can occur several weeks after a COVID infection and can be life-threatening. Until now, however, the precise cause of the condition was unknown. 3/ Image
Read 19 tweets
Mar 12
According to a NEW study, among 289 million adults in 18 European countries, more than 16 million years of life were lost from 2020 through 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 1/ Image
Many people who died during the pandemic would likely have lived longer if the pandemic had not happened.More than half of the total years of life lost would have been lived without disability & independently if the pandemic had been avoided, even among people aged over 80. 2/
About 2.3 million years of life were lost in the UK, a similar number in Germany, 3.2 million in Spain, 2.5 million in Poland, 1.8 million in Italy, and 1.1 million years of life were lost in France. 3/ Image
Read 8 tweets
Mar 4
A NEW study finds that staying away from smartphones can even change one's brain chemistry. Brain scans showed significant activity shifts in reward & craving regions of the brain, resembling patterns seen in substance or alcohol addiction. 1/ Image
A smartphone's glow is often the first and last thing we see as we wake up in the morning and go to sleep at the end of the day. It is increasingly becoming an extension of our body that we struggle to part with. 2/ Image
The researchers recruited young adults for a 72-hour smartphone restriction diet where they were asked to limit smartphone use to essential tasks such as work, daily activities, and communication with their family or significant others. 3/
Read 13 tweets
Mar 2
A NEW study revealed previously unrecognized complement dysregulation associated with impaired cell death and clearance of damaged cells, which may promote nonresolvable (NR) COVID-19 in patients, ultimately necessitating lung transplantation. 1/ Image
Researchers analyzed complement activation in NR-COVID-19 lungs and its association with aberrant host autophagic response. It is the first study to comprehensively show the local presence of the components of the three pathways and regulators of complement activation 2/ Image
The researchers are also the first to investigate the involvement of autophagic mediators as a potential mechanism underlying dysregulated complement-induced tissue damage leading to end-stage respiratory failure. 3/ Image
Read 12 tweets
Feb 28
How to protect the gut from antibiotics!

Antibiotics save lives, but they also wreak havoc on the beneficial bacteria that inhabit the human gut. Innovative therapies could shield the microbiome from their effects. 1/ Image
Image
Researchers have genetically engineered bacteria and nutritional yeast to carry an enzyme that breaks down amoxicillin in the gut without affecting the antibiotic’s ability to fight infection elsewhere in the body. 2/ Image
Other scientists have found that high- fibre diets allay antibiotics’ effects on the gut by changing how intestinal microbes metabolize nutrients. 3/ Image
Read 23 tweets

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