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Flu (Influenza)

Basic Research

The NIAID influenza research program supports basic research to learn more about the structure and pathogenesis of influenza viruses—an understanding that is critical to the development of new vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics.

Some basic research focuses on specific questions regarding the biology of the virus, such as how it enters cells, replicates, mutates, evolves into new strains, and induces an immune response. Other projects are more broadly applicable. For example, the NIAID Influenza Genome Sequencing Project is a collaborative effort to obtain the complete genetic sequences of thousands of human and avian influenza strains. NIAID is rapidly making the sequence information publicly available, giving researchers genomic knowledge that may lead to the development of new and improved public health countermeasures. By September 2008, more than 3,000 human and avian isolates had been completely sequenced and made publicly available.

NIAID also supports the research community by developing new animal models for the preclinical evaluation of vaccine and therapeutic candidates, and provides researchers with important biological resources, such as microarrays, clones, peptides, and reagents.
 
In NIAID’s in-house laboratories, researchers are studying the pathogenesis, immunogenicity, transmissibility, and genetic variability of influenza viruses. They are also investigating host immune responses to flu viruses in animal models and in humans and developing vaccines to prevent influenza, especially strains with pandemic potential. For more information on these studies, see Influenza Research in NIAID Labs.

Illustrations

Research Features and Recent Scientific Findings

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Research Feature

Negative-stained transmission electron micrograph depicting the structural details of an influenza virus particle
The work of one NIAID lab focuses on three related domains of influenza research: seasonal, avian, and pandemic. Its researchers hope that lessons learned with one will benefit the others.
Flu.gov

Community Immunity

Link to Community Immunity illustration Learn how immunizing a critical portion of a community protects most members of the community.

Volunteer for Clinical Studies Button

  • Complete list of  NIAID-funded clinical studies related to flu on ClinicalTrials.gov.
  • Studies at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, MD
  •  

    Related Links

    View a list of links for more information about influenza.

    See Also

    Influenza News Releases 


    Research Feature

    Negative-stained transmission electron micrograph depicting the structural details of an influenza virus particle
    The work of one NIAID lab focuses on three related domains of influenza research: seasonal, avian, and pandemic. Its researchers hope that lessons learned with one will benefit the others.
    Flu.gov

    Community Immunity

    Link to Community Immunity illustration Learn how immunizing a critical portion of a community protects most members of the community.

    Volunteer for Clinical Studies Button

  • Complete list of  NIAID-funded clinical studies related to flu on ClinicalTrials.gov.
  • Studies at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, MD
  •  

    Related Links

    View a list of links for more information about influenza.

    See Also

    Influenza News Releases