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University of Minnesota scientists advance nanobody technology to combat deadly Ebola virus

01.07.25 | University of Minnesota Medical School

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MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL (1/7/2025) – Ebola virus, one of the deadliest pathogens, has a fatality rate of about 50%, posing a serious threat to global health and safety. To address this challenge, researchers at the University of Minnesota and the Midwest Antiviral Drug Discovery (AViDD) Center have developed the first nanobody-based inhibitors targeting the Ebola virus .

Nanobodies are tiny antibodies derived from animals like alpacas. Their small size allows them to access areas of the virus and human tissues that larger antibodies cannot. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the team created nine nanobodies to fight COVID-19. Now, they’ve used this technology to develop two new nanobody inhibitors for Ebola: Nanosota-EB1 and Nanosota-EB2.

The nanobodies work in different ways to stop Ebola. The virus hides the part it uses to attach to human cells under a protective layer. Nanosota-EB1 prevents this layer from opening, blocking the virus from attaching to cells. Nanosota-EB2 targets a part of the virus essential for breaking into cells, stopping its spread. In lab tests, Nanosota-EB2 was especially effective, greatly improving survival rates in Ebola-infected mice.

These nanobodies represent a major step toward treatments for other viruses in the same family, like Sudan and Marburg viruses. This adaptability comes from a new nanobody design method recently developed by the team.

The study, published in PLOS Pathogens, was led by Dr. Fang Li, co-director of the Midwest AViDD Center and a professor of Pharmacology. The research team included graduate student Fan Bu, research scientist Dr. Gang Ye, research assistants Alise Mendoza, Hailey Turner-Hubbard, and Morgan Herbst (Department of Pharmacology), Dr. Bin Liu (Hormel Institute), and Dr. Robert Davey (Boston University). The research was funded by NIH grant U19AI171954.

PLOS Pathogens

10.1371/journal.ppat.1012817

Experimental study

Cells

Discovery of Nanosota-EB1 and -EB2 as Novel Nanobody Inhibitors Against Ebola Virus Infection

23-Dec-2024

M.A. and B.E. are employees of Laulima Government Solutions, LLC. B.E.W. and B.S. are co-founders of Turkey Creek Biotechnology. The University of Minnesota has filed patents on Nanosota-EB1 and Nanosota-EB2 with F.L, F.B., and G.Y. as inventors.

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Contact Information

Kali Kotoski
Midwest AViDD Center
kotos001@umn.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Minnesota Medical School. (2025, January 7). University of Minnesota scientists advance nanobody technology to combat deadly Ebola virus. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOJV52L/university-of-minnesota-scientists-advance-nanobody-technology-to-combat-deadly-ebola-virus.html
MLA:
"University of Minnesota scientists advance nanobody technology to combat deadly Ebola virus." Brightsurf News, Jan. 7 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOJV52L/university-of-minnesota-scientists-advance-nanobody-technology-to-combat-deadly-ebola-virus.html.