Zürcher Nachrichten - Nobel-winning mRNA pioneer Weissman now wants to defeat Covid forever

EUR -
AED 3.763231
AFN 72.850006
ALL 97.694547
AMD 406.591622
ANG 1.84648
AOA 934.411543
ARS 1062.248328
AUD 1.664135
AWG 1.846795
AZN 1.736231
BAM 1.944988
BBD 2.068662
BDT 124.974053
BGN 1.954509
BHD 0.386211
BIF 3030.759153
BMD 1.024574
BND 1.40122
BOB 7.0792
BRL 6.26107
BSD 1.024584
BTN 88.173729
BWP 14.419966
BYN 3.352923
BYR 20081.658581
BZD 2.05802
CAD 1.476032
CDF 2940.528185
CHF 0.939099
CLF 0.037458
CLP 1033.593404
CNY 7.5129
CNH 7.539234
COP 4443.773917
CRC 517.165471
CUC 1.024574
CUP 27.151222
CVE 109.657025
CZK 25.089775
DJF 182.450011
DKK 7.46088
DOP 62.895278
DZD 139.378051
EGP 51.808018
ERN 15.368616
ETB 128.564054
FJD 2.395608
FKP 0.811444
GBP 0.83802
GEL 2.894432
GGP 0.811444
GHS 15.112172
GIP 0.811444
GMD 73.254945
GNF 8858.66843
GTQ 7.905974
GYD 214.355142
HKD 7.977808
HNL 26.056189
HRK 7.349176
HTG 133.845103
HUF 413.40964
IDR 16661.731633
ILS 3.778979
IMP 0.811444
INR 88.250231
IQD 1342.143853
IRR 43121.77089
ISK 144.720915
JEP 0.811444
JMD 160.646968
JOD 0.726732
JPY 161.820224
KES 132.610938
KGS 89.137705
KHR 4141.301968
KMF 489.797505
KPW 922.116403
KRW 1509.945982
KWD 0.31608
KYD 0.85382
KZT 540.716391
LAK 22355.472053
LBP 91748.23774
LKR 301.786793
LRD 191.589916
LSL 19.470574
LTL 3.025301
LVL 0.619755
LYD 5.064047
MAD 10.296712
MDL 19.149046
MGA 4851.409942
MKD 61.552087
MMK 3327.777741
MNT 3481.503737
MOP 8.216069
MRU 40.886712
MUR 47.981137
MVR 15.776551
MWK 1776.562849
MXN 21.18114
MYR 4.607001
MZN 65.473182
NAD 19.472275
NGN 1580.344618
NIO 37.700424
NOK 11.728093
NPR 141.077083
NZD 1.843045
OMR 0.394431
PAB 1.024584
PEN 3.85507
PGK 4.107228
PHP 60.070287
PKR 285.3184
PLN 4.267248
PYG 8044.906728
QAR 3.734938
RON 4.974688
RSD 117.087295
RUB 104.775483
RWF 1425.188693
SAR 3.845993
SBD 8.646813
SCR 14.606998
SDG 615.768956
SEK 11.494957
SGD 1.40566
SHP 0.811444
SLE 23.308477
SLL 21484.816349
SOS 585.490987
SRD 35.967637
STD 21206.621833
SVC 8.964081
SYP 2574.27421
SZL 19.468296
THB 35.526607
TJS 11.177835
TMT 3.58601
TND 3.288519
TOP 2.399654
TRY 36.284048
TTD 6.954881
TWD 33.860651
TZS 2564.985173
UAH 43.324992
UGX 3788.237078
USD 1.024574
UYU 44.731991
UZS 13274.402282
VES 55.101523
VND 25993.452969
VUV 121.639527
WST 2.830681
XAF 652.381368
XAG 0.033719
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.768964
XDR 0.788976
XOF 652.340208
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.374896
ZAR 19.596524
ZMK 9222.397022
ZMW 28.302875
ZWL 329.912544
  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • SCS

    -0.3000

    11

    -2.73%

  • RIO

    0.4500

    59.08

    +0.76%

  • BTI

    -0.6200

    36.12

    -1.72%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.07

    -0.13%

  • GSK

    -0.4850

    33.265

    -1.46%

  • AZN

    0.7200

    67.3

    +1.07%

  • BCC

    -2.0300

    115.37

    -1.76%

  • NGG

    -1.6100

    56.37

    -2.86%

  • BP

    0.2350

    31.355

    +0.75%

  • RELX

    -0.3000

    46.47

    -0.65%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.22

    +0.28%

  • BCE

    -0.4750

    23.155

    -2.05%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.39

    -0.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0950

    12.125

    -0.78%

  • VOD

    -0.1110

    8.099

    -1.37%

Nobel-winning mRNA pioneer Weissman now wants to defeat Covid forever
Nobel-winning mRNA pioneer Weissman now wants to defeat Covid forever / Photo: Mandel NGAN - AFP

Nobel-winning mRNA pioneer Weissman now wants to defeat Covid forever

From developing a one-and-done coronavirus shot to overcoming misinformation and global vaccine inequity, Nobel prize winner Drew Weissman says that at 64, he's only "speeding up."

Text size:

The University of Pennsylvania immunologist was awarded the biggest accolade in medicine on Monday for his pioneering research on messenger RNA, the technology behind Covid-19 vaccines that changed the course of the pandemic.

"What happened is I got a cryptic text from Kati around four in the morning," he said in an interview with AFP, referring to his old friend, collaborator and Nobel co-winner Katalin Kariko.

She had received word from the Nobel committee that they had finally won after being passed over the past couple of years -- but they weren't sure it was real until the official announcement.

"We were wondering if somebody was pulling a prank on us!" he said.

The honors have been piling up for Weissman: the Lasker Award, the Breakthrough Prize, and many more -- though he says the Nobel was always the "ultimate," something he had dreamed of since the age of five, when he first became interested in how things work.

Having just turned 64, and helped the world tame a virus that killed an estimated seven million worldwide, he could be forgiven for considering a well-earned retirement.

But Weissman says there's too much work left to be done. "I'm speeding up and my wife and family aren't happy about it," he joked. "I'm in a good spot."

- 'Ultimate' vaccine -

First on his quest: how to improve upon Covid-19 mRNA vaccines, which have saved countless lives by protecting incredibly well against severe disease and death.

Weissman says the next step in their evolution is universal shots that will be far better than the annualized boosters currently on offer.

A "pan-coronavirus" vaccine he is working on with an international team "should cover all future variants -- and any bat coronaviruses that might cross over into people," he said.

Though coronaviruses are known to mutate fast, Weissman teamed with AI specialists to comb through their structures, which contain roughly 30,000 "nucleotides" or building blocks, in search of "conserved regions" that stay the same.

They have shown it works in animals, and now hope to begin human trials within the next six months. "We think that's going to be the ultimate vaccine," he said.

In all, his lab is developing 20 different mRNA vaccines, with seven already in human trials, protecting against everything from rare autoimmune disorders to food allergies and heart disease.

"We've really expanded our scope of research -- and that's been allowed because the world... now recognizes RNA as important," he said.

It's a far cry from Weissman's anonymity during the 1990s and 2000s when he and Kariko made their key discoveries about how mRNA could be harnessed.

Unlike traditional vaccines, messenger RNA vaccines deliver genetic instructions to turn some of the host's cells into virus-like particles, training the immune system for when it encounters the real deal.

- Misinformation and equity -

Of course, scientific advances need to reach people to make a difference, and to this end Weissman is part of a group working to tackle hesitancy at the global level.

"There's one group who refuse to take the vaccine no matter what -- they follow politicians who submit laws to try to make RNA vaccines illegal in the United States," said Weissman, referring to a Republican-backed bill in Idaho.

But those on the fence -- including conservatives, African Americans, the elderly and others -- may respond to targeted messaging that'll resonate, he added.

He's also involved in setting up production sites in low and middle-income nations, with the first, in Thailand, developing dengue and tularemia vaccines.

It's "an incredibly important thing to give access to RNA technology to every part of the world," he said. "Pfizer and Moderna aren't going to have a big interest in making a vaccine for tularemia," a rare but serious zoonotic disease that is virtually absent in developed countries.

"But if they've got production sites and researchers locally, who want to do it, then they've got everything they need."

I.Widmer--NZN