WashU Medicine leads 2 major pandemic preparedness research projects (Links to an external site)

WashU Medicine leads 2 major pandemic preparedness research projects
WashU Medicine scientists lead two large, multicenter programs to develop vaccines and antibody-based therapies for understudied viruses with pandemic potential, including the three shown above: (left to right) chikungunya, dengue and parainfluenza viruses. The programs are supported by two grants from the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) totaling more than $30 million […]

Keeping COVID-19 in check likely to require periodic boosters (Links to an external site)

Keeping COVID-19 in check likely to require periodic boosters
To be effective, boosters should target variants widely different from COVID-19 virus’s original strain Alsoussi WB, Malladi SK, Zhou JQ, Liu Z, Ying B, Kim W, Schmitz AJ, Lei T, Horvath SC, Sturtz AJ, McIntire KM, Evavold B, Han F, Scheaffer SM, Fox IF, Mirza S, Parra-Rodriguez L, Nachbagauer R, Nestorova B, Chalkias S, Farnsworth […]

Podcast: Why the omicron wave is different (Links to an external site)

Podcast: Why the omicron wave is different
Ellebedy says that in the two years since SARS-CoV-2 first appeared, millions of infections and vaccinations have created a baseline of immunity in the population, and that the current surge in omicron infections could have been much worse if the country, and the world, didn’t have that immunity built up. (Photo: Getty Images)

The race for COVID-19 vaccines (Links to an external site)

The race for COVID-19 vaccines
A conversation with two scientists who took part in the global effort. MD/PhD student Rita Chen and Brett Case, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher, work with SARS-CoV-2 under strict biosafety conditions in Michael Diamond’s biosafety level 3 lab. (Photo: Matt Miller; Washington University School of Medicine)