Passer au contenu principal
températures froides

Un remède contre le rhume pourrait-il être à l'horizon ?

Les scientifiques ont peut-être trouvé un moyen d'arrêter le virus du rhume dans son élan.

Video picks for Infections virales

Tackling the rhume continues to be a challenge.

Most colds are caused by rhinoviruses, but there are around 160 different types and they mutate so easily they rapidly become resistant to drugs, or learn to hide from the système immunitaire.

Scientists from UCSF (University of California, San Francisco) and Stanford University believe that they have found a way to stop the common cold and closely-related viruses.

By using a technique called gene-editing, the researchers were able to reprogramme human and mice cells to stop making a protein that allows the virus to replicate.

Lead researcher Jan Carette, professor of microbiology at Stanford University in California, said: "Our grandmas have always been asking us, 'If you're so smart, why haven't you come up with a cure for the common cold?' Now we have a new way to do that."

Published in Nature Microbiology, Carette and his colleagues found that switching off the protein known as methyltransferase SETD3 meant the virus couldn't replicate and died off.

The scientists then created genetically modified mice which were completely unable to produce that protein. The findings showed that these mice were healthy, despite lacking the protein for their whole lives.

"In contrast to normal mice, the SETD3-deficient mice were completely unaffected by the virus," Carette said. "It was the virus that was dead in the water, not the mouse."

However, the trials are not ready to be tested on humans just yet.

There are no plans to 'gene edit' humans to prevent colds. Instead, the task will be to identify a drug that can achieve the same effect by temporarily suppressing the protein.

For most people, the common cold is more of an inconvenience than a major threat to their health. However, in people with asthma, it can make their symptoms much worse.

Professor Jonathan Ball, a virologist at the University of Nottingham, cautioned that more research is needed to know the approach is safe.

"There is increasing interest in developing treatments that target these host proteins, because it can potentially overcome virus mutation - one of the major barriers to developing effective broadly active antivirals," Ball told the BBC. "But of course, viruses are very adaptable and it is conceivable that even a host-targeting treatment might not keep them at bay for long."

La study's findings are published in Nature Microbiology.

Continuez à lire ci-dessous

About the authorView full bio

Author image

Ashwin Bhandari

Medical Writer

BA Journalism

About the reviewerView full bio

Author image

Natalie Healey

Journaliste indépendante

Licence (Hons) en Sciences Biomédicales

She is a London-based health journalist who has been writing about science and medicine for several years. She is the former head of editorial at Patient.

Historique de l'article

Les informations sur cette page sont examinées par des cliniciens qualifiés.

flu eligibility checker

Demandez, partagez, connectez-vous.

Parcourez les discussions, posez des questions et partagez vos expériences sur des centaines de sujets de santé.

symptom checker

Vous ne vous sentez pas bien ?

Évaluez vos symptômes en ligne gratuitement

Inscrivez-vous à la newsletter Patient

Votre dose hebdomadaire de conseils de santé clairs et fiables - rédigés pour vous aider à vous sentir informé, confiant et maître de la situation.

Veuillez entrer une adresse e-mail valide

By subscribing you accept our Politique de confidentialité. Vous pouvez vous désabonner à tout moment. Nous ne vendons jamais vos données.