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Microchip Can Identify Lethal Flu Strains

CU-Boulder Professors Robert Kuchta and Kathy Rowlen display a scanner and the Flu Chip, which is inserted and read by the scanner to determine specific genetic subtypes of flu viruses within 11 hours.
By Astara March
Washington (UPI) Nov 08, 2005
A microchip has been developed that can tell the difference between ordinary and lethal strains of influenza, such as avian flu H5N1, and its creators say it should be in laboratories within a year.

Researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder have spent the last two years working on the chip that can identify strains of human flu, strains of bird flu, and influenza viruses that contain elements of both -- the organisms doctors fear could start a pandemic, said Kathy Rowlen, professor of chemistry, and Robert Kuchta, professor of biochemistry.

"If you have the flu, you want to know right away what kind it is," Kuchta told United Press International. "If it's the kind we normally get in the winter, you can just go home and take aspirin. If it's a lethal strain you need to start Tamiflu or Relenza right away to reduce the toxicity, make your will just in case, and go into quarantine.

"Being able to identify the type of virus means the best outcome for you and your community, since health officials can start the containment process as soon as possible," he said.

Rowlen told UPI that the chips are about a hundredth of an inch long and contain bits of DNA from a number of flu strains. The chip is placed on a microscope slide, and the slide is dipped in a solution made from broken-down nasal cells from an infected individual plus fluorescent dye.

Since DNA and RNA are intertwined in the nucleus of our cells, when RNA from the viruses in the nasal cells finds a DNA match, it bonds to it like a key in a lock. That part of the chip "lights up" and the virus can be identified.

The chips use parts of viral DNA that don't change much and parts that change very rapidly as viruses mutate, so the chances of determining whether the virus is influenza and identifying the specific strain are optimized, the researchers said.

If the virus is a new strain, more tests can be run to explore its characteristics, they said.

In addition to naturally occurring organisms, Rowlen said the chip could also likely be used to identify viruses that are engineered by terrorists.

Kuchta told UPI that that figure was "on the borderline of being useful in a pandemic, although it is eight to nine times faster than current culture methods that take four to five days."

Currently, the chip takes 11 hours to identify an organism, but the researchers say they are trying to improve the technology so the test takes only one to two hours and can be run from a handheld device the size of a cell phone.

This would allow public health workers to run the test in remote areas of developing nations on either humans or large flocks of agricultural birds. The team is also reconfiguring the chip so it can be used for global surveillance of RNA viruses, including SARS, measles, HIV and hepatitis C, and are trying to include a test element that would determine whether or not the virus is drug resistant.

The Centers for Disease Control evaluated the chip for three primary subtypes of flu in October and found it more than 90 percent accurate, the researchers noted.

A second trial testing the chip's speed and accuracy against standard flu-virus culturing methods will be conducted in December.

Diane Griffin, chair of the Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said she thought the new chip was moving things in the right direction.

"A variety of microchips are being developed for different organisms," Griffin told UPI. "Having one for influenza would be terrific. Even if it were only available in labs or hospitals or the CDC it would help us, but I think the researchers should be able to create a short test in a handheld device with the technology that's available," she said. "Right now it doesn't matter much, but if there's a pandemic, it will matter a great deal."

All rights reserved. � 2005 United Press International. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by United Press International.. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of United Press International.

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Analysis: U.N., Bird Flu Preparation
United Nations (UPI) Nov 04, 2005
The United Nations took time out this week to study ways the global institution and its specialized agency -- and others -- were preparing to confront the possibility of a potentially devastating human bird flu pandemic.



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