Inhaled nanobodies effective against SARS-CoV-2 in hamsters
Researchers have shown that inhalable nanobodies at ultra-low doses can effectively neutralise SARS-CoV-2 in hamsters.
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Drug delivery refers to approaches for transporting a pharmaceutical compound in the body as needed to safely achieve its desired therapeutic effect.
Researchers have shown that inhalable nanobodies at ultra-low doses can effectively neutralise SARS-CoV-2 in hamsters.
Researchers have developed software that can design complex DNA nanodevices which could be used to deliver medicine while in the body.
A new COVID-19 vaccine could provide protection from severe infection from a range of coronaviruses, studies in pigs have shown.
Researchers have shown that an mRNA delivery system can be used to produce the BDNF protein in rats to protect neurons from ischemia.
A team has developed a lotus-root-shaped construct to deliver iPSC-derived pancreatic beta-cells to patients with type I diabetes mellitus.
A new delivery vector using platelets has shown success in pre-clinical trials at delivering photothermal particles and immunostimulators to tumours.
A team have shown that a tumour-suppressing and killing molecule delivered to the brain by stem cells has been successful in mice.
A team has used two viruses to administer specific tumour components in mice with cancer to stimulate their immune system.
A novel nanotherapy can decrease intestinal inflammation and shrink lesions in rodent models of Crohn's disease, a study has shown.
Treating only a few nerve cells with the hyper-interleukin-6 (hIL-6) gene therapy stimulated the regeneration of nerves.
Scientists have developed an inhaled treatment for asthma that prevents excess mucus from building up in mice.
Scientists report their phage-based inhaled vaccine delivery system elicited a robust antibody response in both mice and non-human primates.
Researchers say this is the first time that CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing has been used to treat cancer effectively in a living animal and that the technique could be revolutionary.
The synthetic protein nanoparticle can cross the blood-brain barrier and deliver a targeted therapeutic to glioblastoma cells, say researchers.
A team fused the peptide somatostatin to a brain transport protein and found it treated memory loss associated with Alzheimer's in mice.