Scientists turn to llamas in a bold bid to fight COVID‑19【World News】

Scientists turn to llamas in a bold bid to fight COVID‑19【World News】

  • A Llamas‑Led Breakthrough in the Fight Against COVID‑19

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  • In a twist that could have come straight from a scientific sitcom, scientists in Brussels and Austin discovered that a trusty llama named Winter might hold the key to a new COVID‑19 treatment.*

  • Why a Llama? Why Now?

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  • In 2016, a side project pulled the group into the world of camel‑derived antibodies.
  • Fast forward to 2023: a brand‑new coronavirus pops up, and the team realizes that the llama’s unique immune system could be the missing puzzle piece.
  • Winter was given “safe” versions of the older SARS and MERS viruses, and her blood was swabbed to capture the secret sauce—the tiny, powerful nanobodies.


  • What Are Nanobodies?

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  • Think of them as mini‑bosses that fit the coronavirus’s “crown” (spike proteins) like a perfect glove.
  • Llamas, like other camelids, produce both standard antibodies and these smaller, easier‑to‑handle fragments.

  • From Laboratory to Living Labs

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  • The Belgian team, spearheaded by Bert Schepens and Xavier Saelens, sifted through the nanobody varieties to pick the strongest performers.
  • Next step: animal testing, with a goal to roll out human trials by year‑end.
  • Pharmaceutical partners are already in the mix, ready to turn lab magic into market reality.

  • Not the First Llama‑BFF of Biotech

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  • Back in 2018, Sanofi took a hefty €3.9 billion to buy a nanobody specialist, Ablynx, indicating that the llama‑nanobody craze isn’t brand new.
  • Yet Winter’s story adds a fresh chapter to this evolving narrative.
  • Bottom Line*
  • “The new coronavirus is just a cousin of old SARS—same crown, same spikes. If we can lock that cousin in, we might keep the family tradition of pandemics at bay—a win for everyone.”