Mouse model advances research into common cold
Researchers targeting new treatments for the common cold can now look forward to getting help from a new mouse model for the ailment. Small animal studies for cold therapies had been impossible. Humans and chimps are the only two species known to contract rhinoviruses, most of which use the ICAM-1 receptor on human cells to gain entry. Mice have a version of ICAM-1 that prevent entry. A team of scientists led by Sebastian Johnston, an asthma researcher at Imperial College London genetically modified mice so that their ICAM-1 receptors were similar to humans'. The same mouse models should also help study severe asthma attacks.
"It will open up new paths to finding treatments which have been delayed for many years and provides us with the opportunities for further breakthroughs in the future," said Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, chief executive of the Medical Research Council.
- read the report from the Guardian
ALSO: Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic have developed a mouse model for age-related macular degeneration. Report
Comments
I do not understand. There are a couple of ways to catch a cold.
1. not to dress properly
2. airborne you contract the cold because of the airborne antigens in the air.
3. direct contact, the person did not wash his or her hands after sneezing. and you and the person shook hands.
4 the person had contaminated mucos stemming from his or her rhino or nose and shared the mucos or sputem with another person.
Does it not count on the level of the persons immunsystem and the amount of stress the person can tolerate before contracting the germs of another person, whom is not effected by the HIV virus?
lastly the flu is a virus, and it never dies. Does this mean it never dies in our bodies, or it never dies in the hospitals? can someone answer this?
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