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Llama power: can tiny llama nanobodies improve norovirus anti-viral therapies?
- December 14, 2023
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Human noroviruses cause acute gastroenteritis, a global health problem for which there are no vaccines or antiviral drugs. Although most healthy patients recover completely from the infection, norovirus can be life-threatening in infants, the elderly and people with underlying diseases. Estimates indicate that human noroviruses cause approximately 684 million illnesses and 212,000 deaths annually.
In the current study published in the journal Nature Communications, Salmen, Prasad and their colleagues investigated a novel strategy to neutralize human noroviruses. They tested whether tiny antibodies produced by llamas, called nanobodies, could effectively neutralize human norovirus infection in the lab. The unexpected findings reveal that nanobodies could be developed as a therapeutic agent against human norovirus.
Llama nanobodies may give an upper hand

“Our collaborators from Argentina, Dr. Marina Bok and Dr. Viviana Parreño at the Institute of Virology and Technology Innovation, had prepared nanobodies from llamas that were inoculated with human norovirus-like particles from different strains,” Salmen said. “We worked with one nanobody named M4, which bound to the predominant GII.4 strain, testing its ability to neutralize different norovirus strains, that is, to prevent them from infecting human cells.”
The researchers tested the ability of the nanobodies to prevent live viruses from infecting human intestinal organoids or mini guts grown in the lab. Mini guts are models of human intestinal cells, closely representing actual small intestine tissue and its functions, that enable scientists to study how noroviruses work and to test potential therapies.

The researchers used crystallography and other techniques to look closely at the interactions between nanobodies and noroviruses to try to understand how the M4 nanobody recognizes and neutralizes a variety of noroviruses when they expected it would recognize only the GII.4 strain used to generate M4.
Norovirus particles: a dynamic structure
The team discovered that the M4 nanobody recognized a hidden pocket in the norovirus particles that would be exposed only when the particles underwent a structural change. “The traditional thinking is that viral particles are in a very stable compact state, but in reality these particles ‘breathe’ considerably,” Salmen said. “Recent studies have shown that the structure of norovirus particles is dynamic, alternating between a resting or compact conformation and a raised conformation.”“We think that the raised state is important for the virus to bind to cells and infect them,” Prasad said. “We also think that when the viral particles are in the raised state, the hidden pocket is exposed and available for the nanobody to bind to it and, acting like a wedge, to keep the particle in an elevated, potentially unstable state, preventing it from collapsing back down into the compact, more stable resting state.”


Other contributors to this work include Liya Hu, Natthawan Chaimongkol, Khalil Ettayebi, Stanislav V. Sosnovtsev, Kaundal Soni, B. Vijayalakshmi Ayyar, Sreejesh Shanker, Frederick H. Neill, Banumathi Sankaran, Robert L. Atmar and Kim Y. Green. The authors are affiliated with one of the following institutions: Baylor College of Medicine, Institute for Virology and Technology Innovation-Argentina, National Institutes of Health and Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
List of Referenes
- Wilhelm Salmen, Liya Hu, Marina Bok, Natthawan Chaimongkol, Khalil Ettayebi, Stanislav V. Sosnovtsev, Kaundal Soni, B. Vijayalakshmi Ayyar, Sreejesh Shanker, Frederick H. Neill, Banumathi Sankaran, Robert L. Atmar, Mary K. Estes, Kim Y. Green, Viviana Parreño, B. V. Venkataram Prasad. A single nanobody neutralizes multiple epochally evolving human noroviruses by modulating capsid plasticity. Nature Communications, 2023; 14 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42146-0
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