B Acad Nat Med Paris
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B Acad Nat Med Paris · Feb 2023
Review[Cell senescence, a new target for respiratory viral infections: From influenza virus to SARS-CoV-2].
The accumulation of senescent cells in tissues is a key process of aging and age-related diseases, including lung diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung fibrosis, or cancer. In recent years, the spectrum of respiratory diseases associated with cellular senescence has been broadened, in particular acute viral pulmonary infections, foremost among which is coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID19), which is particularly severe in the elderly or in subjects with comorbidities. ⋯ Cellular senescence potentially represents an original target for attacking these diseases, although its specific mechanisms remain largely misunderstood. New anti-senescent therapeutic approaches are thus proposed during severe viral pulmonary infections, with the aim of preventing acute effects and/or, in the longer term, pulmonary sequelae.
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B Acad Nat Med Paris · Dec 2022
Review[Industrial property and basic research in the genesis of the mRNA vaccine against COVID-19].
The extreme speed of the design and provisional approval of the covid-19 mRNA vaccines, as well as the speed of their mass production one year after the start of the pandemic, surprised and contradicted all the experts and big pharmaceutical companies who expected years of development. Their superior efficacy to other vaccines should make mRNA vaccines indispensable, but their diffusion remains low outside developed countries. Several reasons are given, ranging from logistical difficulties to mistrust of populations or the impossibility of producing them locally without lifting patents. Considering that, in these debates, these patents may be challenged because they do not meet the necessary criteria of inventiveness, it appeared necessary to review the history, over more than three decades, of the academic research and entrepreneurial spirit that led to the advent of mRNA platforms, to examine their mutual merits and the role of industrial property for biotechnology companies.