Dr. Angela Rasmussen Profile picture
Mar 27 21 tweets 9 min read Read on X
I’m not going to be able to tell you about the consequences of EVERY lost grant, but I’m going to try.

Let’s start with the Antiviral Drug Discovery (AViDD) program for pathogens of pandemic concern! It just got unceremonially shitcanned. Image
Here’s a list of all the funded research with links to NIH Reporter so you can dig through all the info about what your tax dollars have funded.

Do you think we need more antiviral medication? I do! AViDD research was developing new antivirals.

niaid.nih.gov/research/antiv…
We don’t have many of these, because viruses evolve too fast, infections are diagnosed too slow, & unlike bacteria, viruses can be so different that there aren’t many broad spectrum antibiotics. The AViDD centers were funded to develop antivirals for potential pandemic viruses. Image
Like the ASAP center based at Sloan Kettering, which was using AI structural analysis to predict & test molecules targeting 3 virus families: coronaviruses, flaviviruses (dengue, yellow fever, Zika, West Nile, HCV), & picornaviruses (polio, EV-D68, FMDV).

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
Or the AC/DC center at Emory, developing nucleoside analogs & polymerase inhibitors against CoVs, flavis, picornas, paramyxoviruses (Nipah, Hendra, measles, RSV), & togaviruses (Chikungunya, VEEV/WEEV/EEEV). They had 4 drugs to test & were screening more.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
At Scripps there was CAMPP, focused on CoVs, flavis, & hemorrhagic fever viruses (filoviruses: Ebola, Marburg; bunyaviruses: SFTSV; arenaviruses: Lassa). They were advancing promising oral candidates as well as finding drugs with new mechanisms of action.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
I was fortunate enough to be invited to speak at a pandemic preparedness seminar hosted by CAMPP last month, where I got to hear from a number of colleagues doing amazing antiviral discovery work in CAMPP & other AViDD centers. And all anyone could talk about was H5N1.
In fact, I was on my way to the symposium getting calls from reporters about another hospitalized H5N1 patient as well as new pre immune studies just out. Flu antivirals don’t work very well & can develop resistance quickly, so new antivirals are crucial for flu pandemics.
In my talk, I went over how slashing & burning government personnel, data, & funding will devastate our ability to prevent & respond to an H5N1 pandemic. Now CAMPP & the AViDD program can be added to my slide on the destruction of American readiness.

sandiegouniontribune.com/2025/03/02/exp…
Also lost is this AViDD center at Stanford focused on multiple drugs targeting all RNA viruses via a combo of mechanisms: small molecule inhibitors, antisense, & protein drugs. Combination therapies are much less likely to select for resistance mutations.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
The MAVDA center sought novel drug targets in CoVs, flaviviruses, & alphaviruses like CHIKV. Charlie Rice won the Nobel prize in 2021 for work that led to drugs that cured HCV. I’ve known him since I was a postdoc. He’s brilliant & also a very kind person

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
The Midwest AViDD Center at U of Minnesota was doing a lot of sophisticated high throughput screening to find novel antivirals for SARS2 and also hemorrhagic arenaviruses, filoviruses, & flaviviruses. Also a training/outreach component for effective use.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
This center at UCSF is led by world class viral proteomics experts (also shout to Regina, SK, where Nevan is from, so I’ll forgive him for being a Niners fan). They were developing novel targeted drugs for 8 viral families! All gone now.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
This goes out to all the lab leakers who have baselessly accused Ralph Baric of making SARS-CoV-2. No. His READDI AViDD Center was making new drugs to treat emerging CoVs & other viruses. He was trying to prevent or end pandemics, not start them.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
Finally this AViDD center at UTMB was targeting proteases and polymerases to develop new drugs against coronaviruses, flaviviruses, & henipaviruses (Hendra & Nipah). All emerging viruses we need better drugs for.

reporter.nih.gov/search/EpbjKrq…Image
These AViDD centers were an investment in our future, developing medicines that we could use to prevent or respond to viral pandemic threats. They employed hundreds of people & contributed to the economy as well as our toolbox of countermeasures.

And that’s no longer a priority.
How can the government claim it is making America healthy again when it’s literally shutting down research that would keep Americans healthy from pandemic viral pathogens? We need more ways to treat viral diseases, not less. We need more antiviral drugs.
And how does it benefit the American taxpayer to put hundreds of Americans out of work? I’m not an economist but I’m pretty sure that swelling the ranks of the unemployed is not a good way to boost the economy.
Cutting programs like AViDD makes us less prosperous, less innovative, less competent, less prepared, and less safe. We will have fewer countermeasures to fight emerging viruses. We are falling behind.

This is not just a funding cut. It’s an attack on our well-being.
We aren’t helpless here. Congress must step in and insist that appropriations are applied as they have decided. DOGE & Trump do not legally have the right to can programs that Congress paid for. So call your representatives & demand they step up.
AViDD invested our tax dollars in the future health of the American people. I reject a regime that attacks science, puts Americans out of work, & endangers us all on the whims of idiot billionaires with authoritarian ambitions. We should demand the return on our investment.

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More from @angie_rasmussen

Mar 20
I’ve now been asked about the USDA H5N1 action plan quite a few times, so maybe I should say a few things about it.

There are a few things I like about it, more things I don’t, and some things about it that are completely WTAF.

This is the 5 step plan: Image
Basically this is the plan:
$500M for biosecurity improvements
$400M for indemnifying producer losses
Deregulation
$100M for vaccine research
Relax import controls to make it easier to buy flu-free eggs from abroad

Link here: usda.gov/about-usda/new…
So here’s what I like about it:

Obv I think investing $100M in vaccine research is a great idea. IMO the cow & poultry outbreaks will not be controlled without vaccination. It’s backed up by evidence from 🇨🇳 & 🇲🇽 that it ends avian outbreaks & stops transmission to humans.
Read 20 tweets
Mar 7
RFK Jr is not a trustworthy source about vaccine efficacy or zoonosis, particularly for H5N1 in chickens.

His claim that poultry vaccination will "turn those birds into mutant factories" is incorrect & I've got receipts 👇

h/t @Alexander_Tin
cbsnews.com/news/rfk-jr-va…
Most of the data on poultry vaccination comes from Mexico and China. Mexico has used vaccination successfully for 30 years to control bird flu in poultry. However, this did influence virus evolution since flu vaccines aren't sterilizing.
journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/jv…
This created a lot of concern and stalled implementation of bird flu vaccines for poultry. However, huge H7N9 outbreaks in China were decimating millions of birds and causing a lot of human cases. Something had to be done, so China decided to move ahead with poultry vaccines.
Read 12 tweets
Mar 6
I found Bhattacharya’s hearing striking not because of what he promised to do, but what he wouldn’t commit to. For example, refusing to commit to not breaking the law if asked to do so. Image
There’s a longer list of things he would not commit to, including:
-Not doing unnecessary studies on vaccine safety because someone might disagree with settled science
-Funding grants with the billions in appropriations being illegally impounded
-Rehiring fired federal workers
He repeatedly dodged questions about whether he’d continue to illegally terminate the federal workforce with this “I haven’t been involved in personnel decisions” excuse. He would not answer directly about rehiring or not depriving more civil servants of their livelihoods Image
Read 7 tweets
Mar 5
Well my old friend Jay Bhattacharya is having his Senate confirmation hearing today so time for a quick refresher on who this guy is.

A mass infection proponent who never met a contrarian position he wouldn’t take for personal gain.
He first rose to national prominence with the Santa Clara study—a terribly executed serology study that couldn’t be validated & concluded the CFR of COVID-19 was much lower than it actually was.

medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
Turns out those results were desired by the initially undisclosed funder of the study: the CEO of JetBlue, who wanted a scientific pretext for lifting public health pandemic control measures and get people back on planes.

buzzfeednews.com/article/stepha…
Read 19 tweets
Feb 27
Okay, so. I don’t know how much of a heads up this is when it’s just a notice about these 2 mutations. Do they really raise serious concerns about “increased transmission?”

Sort of. It’s more complex than D701N & E626K, omg pandemic bird flu.

What do these mutations do in H5N1?
Flu is a segmented, negative sense RNA virus. This means its genome is divided into 8 pieces and they are negative coding sense and serve as a template for transcribing (copying) mRNA from each segment.

D701N and E672K are in a segment called PB2.
PB2 is one of 3 subunits (with PA and PB1) that make up the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp). The RdRp both makes mRNA that’s translated into viral proteins and copies the viral genome segments in the process of virus replication to package into progeny virus particles.
Read 24 tweets
Feb 19
I have insomnia a lot lately so may as well share what’s literally keeping me up at night.

It’s a long list but tonight it’s flu. Yes, H5N1, but also seasonal flu. Firing federal scientists brings a flu-filled future.

Have you ever wondered how flu vaccine strains are chosen?
Every year the flu vaccine changes to match the strains that are circulating around the world. Right now these are 3 main viruses: H1N1(pdm09) and H3N2 flu A and 1 from the flu B Victoria lineage.
Although they are the same subtype, the flu A H1N1 and H3N2 are actually a lot of different viruses. Within each subtype are many different genotypes. Flu is an RNA virus that acquires mutations as it spreads through host populations. Flu viruses are very diverse.
Read 19 tweets

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