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Active HORIZON European Commission

Causative Link between respirAtory syncytial viRus and chronic lung diseases: Identifying Targets for therapY

€7.05M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht
Country Netherlands
Start Date Jan 01, 2024
End Date Dec 31, 2028
Duration 1,826 days
Number of Grantees 9
Roles Participant; Coordinator; Third Party
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101137201
Grant Description

Chronic respiratory diseases are non-communicable diseases for which infections by several respiratory viruses and human genetics constitute major risk factors.

The molecular and physiological mechanisms of how these viral infections cause and contribute to non-communicable disease development are unknown.

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a virus that infects nearly all infants before the age of 2-years and that is linked to asthma development. We propose an integrative approach to identify genetic risk factors and mechanisms underlying virus-induced asthma.

Specifically, using two national cohorts (Estonian and Spanish), we will identify human genetic risk factors and RSV strains that contribute to severe bronchiolitis. We analyse how RSV perturbs intracellular networks to change cellular properties that trigger asthma development.

We will use Artificial Intelligence (AI)-based techniques to integrate generated data with the current biological knowledge, to generate RSV-induced perturbation signatures and to identify drug-like compounds able to revert the effects of the RSV-induced perturbations.

We will validate both mechanisms and candidate compounds in patient derived airway organoid models and, when promising, in a controlled human infection model trial. CLARITY will impact the understanding, prevention and possibly treatment of virus-triggered asthma.

The results will enable development of a genetic risk score for long-term asthma development that enables personalised prevention campaigns, which will be developed jointly with patient groups.

The molecular mechanisms discovered, and the drug-like compounds that revert the perturbation signatures, will enable development of mechanism-targeted drugs.

Fundamentally, the mechanisms identified in this specific model for a strong viral contribution to non-communicable disease will likely represent general mechanisms of how viral infections cause onset and development of other non-communicable diseases.

All Grantees

Tartu Ulikool; Stichting Resvinet; Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen Deutsches Forschungszentrum Fuer Gesundheit Und Umwelt Gmbh; Instituto de Salud Carlos Iii; Servicio Madrileno de Salud; Fundacio Institut de Recerca Biomedica (Irb Barcelona); Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht; Fundacion Para la Investigacion Biomedica Del Hospital Universitario Puerta de Hierro-Majadahonda; Fundacion Para la Investigacion Biomedica Del Hospital Universiatrio la Paz

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