Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Epidemics, and even pandemics are occurring at an accelerating pace. And we anticipate

  • to see outbreaks every year or two. So our laboratory has been orienting toward a rapid

  • discovery program, where we can respond immediately and seek antibody treatments or preventions

  • in real time, as they happen. We've been prototyping this in previous epidemics. We've been preparing

  • for this moment, and now we're activated around responding to a coronavirus.

  • Hi, I'm James Crowe. I'm Director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Center.

  • Dr. Crowe is part of a special team of experts, universities,and advanced genetic sequencing

  • groups that are trained to deliver rapid treatments in the midst of an outbreak.

  • It was a concept launched back in 2017 by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

  • DARPA usually puts out calls for research about things that can't be done right now.

  • They pitch a vision for something that is desirable, it's an aspirational goal, sort

  • of crazy ideas. So the pandemic prevention program, or P3,

  • the idea was an epidemic occurs, and in 60 days, groups would take blood samples, and

  • be ready to treat people 60 days later. Normally, drug programs take a decade, or certainly

  • years. So it was a crazy idea. Last year, we did a simulation in which we pulled the

  • timeframe down to about 78 days. So we were pretty excited about that success,

  • and it's the fastest anyone has gone from a blood sample to an antibody cure. That we

  • know of. And we were just simulating last year.

  • But this year, we're doing it for real. The goal is to safely develop an antibody

  • therapy that can provide immediate immunity, potentially before a vaccine is ready.

  • The clock started to tick once this coronavirus outbreak switched from epidemic to global

  • pandemic. The pandemic started in China, and certainly

  • we knew in December that something unusual was going on there. But it wasn't clear in

  • December 2019 that this would spread anywhere else.

  • By January, the first case occurred in the United States. And by then, our team got concerned

  • that we really needed to activate around this. Fortunately, as soon as the outbreak occurred,

  • the sequences of the virus were published. It's an RNA virus. And we know that there's

  • only one major protein on the surface of the cell, and it sort or looks like spikes, so

  • people have called it the spike protein. And we know that's what attaches to your cells,

  • and attacks you and inserts the virus in. Your body has an immune system, and it responds

  • to threats in various ways. The principal way after you're infected that you prevent

  • the infection from occurring again, is through a network of proteins in your body called

  • antibodies. Once you've seen a virus, like coronavirus or flu, you remember that virus

  • when it comes back. You already have antibodies, and they're sort of a shield.

  • So the idea is, if we have antibodies that can attach to the spike protein and cover

  • the virus, it'll block the virus from being able to get in.

  • So we know what we're looking for. We want antibodies to that spike protein.

  • To find antibodies, they need to secure blood samples from patients first.

  • We actually contacted the providers, the medical teams who were taking care of the first cases.

  • And in fact, the sample from the first case in the United States came to us through that

  • network. There's a cloud of chaos around these cases.

  • There are family members, and press, and lots of people in PPE. It's actually hard to get

  • the communication to the subject themselves, or their families. When we do that, almost

  • invariably the people say, "I would love to contribute. I would not want anyone else to

  • go through what I went through." These are important samples.

  • We've been working with FedEx Critical operations, and they've been essential to our success.

  • So not only just barcoding like they normally do. We could watch. The package goes into

  • the truck, and it's coming toward us, so we go "It'll be here in 30 seconds."

  • We do whatever it takes to move this stuff around. But we do it safely, but we're tracking

  • everything very carefully. We start with whole blood. It's got a lot

  • of red blood cells, which carry the oxygen and the white blood cells. And so we pull

  • the white blood cells out, and those are the immune system cells. And there are the B cells

  • for antibodies. And so we pulled those out...It's like a needle in a haystack, we know a few

  • of those in there are for the recent infection, like coronavirus.

  • And so that's where the high technology comes in, is drilling down and finding the individual

  • cells that make an antibody. Now we have a little cell, and it's very fragile,

  • very small, and we have to manipulate that, and get it to make the antibody and confirm

  • yes, I'm a coronavirus cell. At which point, we bust the cell open, and

  • inside that are the genes for the antibody. So we recover the genes from a single cell

  • and we just sequence it, and we can print the gene out in a DNA printer. The machine

  • gives us the DNA back. It's pretty amazing. That's come out of a revolution in science

  • called synthetic genomics. So you can synthesize DNA, at very high scale.

  • Then we can put that back into a cell in the laboratory, and that cell becomes a factory

  • to make that antibody. Then we have lots of the antibody, which is

  • a protein we can give to people and protect them.

  • So there's a lot of steps involved, and some of its conventional, but some of it's magical

  • We run into obstacles. We have to overcome those obstacles immediately, like within minutes

  • sometimes. We have about four or five thousand antibodies

  • in our pipeline now, that we've gotten from single cells from survivors and then we'll

  • down-select. We'll look at about 20 of them in mice. And

  • then we'll end up with two of them in monkeys, and we'll be done. That's the sprint. The

  • first human trials of any antibody are likely to be in the June to August window. And that's

  • when we just put antibody into 20 people, and make sure nothing bad happens. And then

  • there's a next step where we need to figure out, what's the dose? So usually we give 100

  • people a dose, another 100 people a lower dose.

  • And then finally you do what's called a phase III trial, and you figure out if it works.

  • And that's thousands of people. If the antibody works, and we already know it's safe, then

  • it would be released to the public. That's going to take an uncertain amount of time.

  • Probably year, year and a half before it would fully be released to the public, because we

  • have to do this methodically. And you could say, "Well you have it, just give it to me.

  • Why don't you just give it to me?" But, some treatments make people worse. Hopefully by

  • public health measures, social distancing and that sort of thing, we slow things down.

  • It'll remain to be seen whether this becomes a winter thing, and we have a whole nother

  • season. That's why everybody's pushing. It's interesting to watch our team operating, because

  • they're kind of in a flow state. These guys are working about 20 hours a day since January.

  • But at the same time, they're actually doing the work at an unprecedented pace for something

  • that's killing thousands of people. So there's a passion and a mission in it. Scientists

  • typically are very methodical. They like to repeat things, they like to be sure. They

  • don't like to tell people the result until they've done it more than once. And in this

  • type of science or discovery, we can't do that. And we're constantly trying to retrain

  • ourselves to think more like. You know, what's good enough? What's the 80% solution? We got

  • to move forward. And it's not natural to think that way.

  • Coordinated response teams that can deliver rapid therapies will be a critical component

  • in future pandemic preparedness. But how can we get ahead of this next time?

  • You cannot pick the next one. You can't predict, "I know it's going to be a filovirus, or a

  • flavivirus, or an alphavirus. But you know one of them is coming.

  • And what we've been advocating is, why don't we get antibody cures for all these teed-up

  • ahead of time? And when it happens, we don't have this scramble.

  • So we've been methodically making antibodies. And we're about 40 into it. We have antibodies

  • to other coronaviruses. But they don't cross-react with this one. But I think preparing ahead

  • of time makes more sense than always waiting.

Epidemics, and even pandemics are occurring at an accelerating pace. And we anticipate

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it