Raphael Mannino
Management
Sure. Thank you. I think one of the first things is just to go back to our ability number one, to be taken up and expressed in a macrophage. Macrophages are one of the major antigen presenting cells in the immune system. And the second thing is that although people tend to focus on antibodies for things like influenza virus and coronavirus, we also know that cell-mediated immunity killer T-cells are probably much more effective at protecting a person from lung destruction or lung disease than the antibodies are. And the third is that although we give most of these vaccines intramuscularly, well, it has been shown and we have shown with the Lipid Nanocrystals that delivering them orally allows you to express both antibody and cell-mediated immune responses on the mucosal surface, which is the way that these viruses enter the body. So just focusing on respiratory viruses, and the ability to make a vaccine that is safer, because you can give it intramuscularly, you can boost, you don't get side effects when you do that, you can give it orally so that you can or intravenously so that you can immunize and get better strong mucosal immunity, as well as systemic immunity gives the Lipid Nanocrystal a large advantage over anything like a lipid nanoparticle or viral vector. When you extend from there, and you go to and you look at other cells like virally infected cells, inflamed cells of chronic immune inflammation, inflammatory disease, and cancer cells, all of these cells, they start as normal cells when they convert or are converted into pathogenic cells by virus infection, by oncogenesis, by inflammation, that's assuming pops from the inside of the cell membrane to the outside, that and phosphoserine receptors in some cases, are seen to appear on the outside of the cell surface. So both of those things maximize and enable the targeting delivery of that the nanocrystal formulated drugs, as well as the uptake either by phagocytosis or through fusion. And that's important just to get into a little bit more immunology, in that if you want to antibody response, you want to delivery let's say into an endosome, but if you want cell mediated immunity, you need to have the antigen directly in the cytoplasm. So our ability to enter a cell in both ways maximizes our ability to enhance the efficacy of the drug that we're delivering.