Tests are underway to establish if equipping a human immune cell with a 'targeting device' from a virus is safe Human cells have been mixed with bacteria and viruses to create a hybrid immune cell that can kill off deadly resistant bacteria, scientists have said. Some viruses are designed to infect bacteria and target their prey in a different way to the human immune system. The researchers were able to take the virus’s targeting mechanism and graft it onto a human immune antibody. They then did the same with bacteria, which attack other bacteria, and a human antibody. In experiments in the lab the hybrids, dubbed “lysibodies”, attached themselves to Staphylococcus bacteria – which can become the resistant superbug MRSA. This then signalled the immune system to attack and destroy the bacteria. Tests of the technique on mice infected with MRSA found their survival rate was significantly improved, the researchers said. Human testing has now begun to establish whether the lysibodies are safe and how effective they are. One of the researchers, Professor Vincent Fischetti, of The Rockefeller University in the US, said: “Bacteria-infecting viruses have molecules that recognize and tightly bind to these common components of the bacterial cell’s surface that the human immune system largely misses. “We have co-opted these molecules, and we've put them to work helping the human immune system fight off microbial pathogens.” Some viruses have “molecular snippers”, called lysins, that target carbohydrates on the bacteria’s cell walls. Human antibodies are designed to target proteins and have a bit of a blind spot for carbohydrates. By creating a hybrid with a human immune cell, this should give the body a whole new way to identify disease cells. And Professor Fischetti added: “Based on our results, it may be possible to use not just lysins, but any molecule with a high affinity toward a target on any pathogen – be it virus, parasite, or fungus – to create hybrid antibodies. “This approach could make it possible to develop a new class of immune boosting therapies for infectious diseases.” The human immune antibodies used in the hybrids do not attack the disease, but instead flag up targets for immune system killer cells. Source