Posted on Sep 13, 2022
Oregon State University researchers tackle canine cancer
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A Team at Oregon State University is researching antibody treatment for dogs with cancer. One helpful tool in the research has stemmed from an unusual place: llamas and alpacas. Currently, dogs rely on the same forms of cancer treatment that people use, like chemotherapy, surgery and radiation.
The type of treatment the OSU team is researching would rely on “nanobodies,” a tiny antibody that can be used as a tool to fight against body invaders like tumors.
The team is researching a different kind of treatment that dogs can use to fight cancer since current options still take a toll on our four-legged friends.
“They do have all the side effects that humans realize when taking those types of therapeutics as well,” said Dan Mourich, a molecular biologist on the team. “It impacts the quality of life for the dog and the owner.”
He added that many owners typically opt out of treatment altogether.
The treatment the team is working on, an immunotherapeutic, would harness the power of antibodies. Nanobodies are much smaller than human antibodies. They can be found in camelids, which include animals like llamas and alpacas.
The type of treatment the OSU team is researching would rely on “nanobodies,” a tiny antibody that can be used as a tool to fight against body invaders like tumors.
The team is researching a different kind of treatment that dogs can use to fight cancer since current options still take a toll on our four-legged friends.
“They do have all the side effects that humans realize when taking those types of therapeutics as well,” said Dan Mourich, a molecular biologist on the team. “It impacts the quality of life for the dog and the owner.”
He added that many owners typically opt out of treatment altogether.
The treatment the team is working on, an immunotherapeutic, would harness the power of antibodies. Nanobodies are much smaller than human antibodies. They can be found in camelids, which include animals like llamas and alpacas.
Oregon State University researchers tackle canine cancer
Posted from opb.org
Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 2
Posted 2 y ago
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."They offer a lot of unique attributes with the size and convenience of production,” Cebra said. “There’s been a huge amount of interest throughout the biomedical community looking at them for everything from COVID to Ebola virus to treatment of some autoimmune diseases.”
Researchers in England have found that the nanobodies can effectively target the virus that causes COVID-19.
“The sky is really the limit,” Cebra said."
..."They offer a lot of unique attributes with the size and convenience of production,” Cebra said. “There’s been a huge amount of interest throughout the biomedical community looking at them for everything from COVID to Ebola virus to treatment of some autoimmune diseases.”
Researchers in England have found that the nanobodies can effectively target the virus that causes COVID-19.
“The sky is really the limit,” Cebra said."
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Posted 2 y ago
Great to see them thinking out of the box!
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