Background Circle Background Circle
How the COVID Virus Sneaks Past Immune Defenses

How the COVID Virus Sneaks Past Immune Defenses

TUESDAY, Dec. 28, 2021 (HealthDay News) – Just how SARS-CoV-2 eludes the human immune system has mystified scientists for close to two years, but now they’ve uncovered an important clue.

Turns out the virus that causes COVID-19 has some stealth moves that allow it to spread from cell to cell, hiding from the immune system, new research reveals.

“It’s basically an underground form of transmission,” said study author Shan-Lu Liu, of the Center for Retrovirus Research at Ohio State University in Columbus.

And, he added, this cell-to-cell transmission is not sensitive to antibodies from prior COVID infection or vaccination.

The new study compares SARS-CoV-2 to an earlier coronavirus (SARS-CoV) that caused the 2003 SARS outbreak, and it sheds light on how viruses spread and resist a person’s immunity.

It also helps explain why the first outbreak led to much higher death rates and lasted only eight months, while the current pandemic has persisted for two years with many cases being symptom-free — and no end in sight.

Cell culture experiments showed that SARS-CoV-2 limits release of particles that can be inactivated by a person’s antibodies. Like a stealth warrior, it stays tucked within cell walls and spreads from one cell to another.

“SARS-CoV-2 can spread efficiently from cell to cell because there are essentially no blockers from the host immunity,” Liu explained.

That familiar spike protein on the virus’ surface enables the cell-to-cell spread. Neutralizing antibodies are less effective against the virus when it spreads through cells.

In comparing the two viruses, research found that the 2003 virus is more efficient at cell-free transmission. This is when freely floating viral particles infect target cells by binding to a receptor on their surface. That virus remained vulnerable to antibodies produced by previous infection and vaccines.

But the cell-to-cell transmission of the COVID-19 virus makes it harder to neutralize with antibodies.

For the study, researchers used non-infectious pseudoviruses, with both kinds of coronavirus spike proteins on their surface.

“The spike protein is necessary and sufficient for both SARS-CoV-2 and SARS-CoV cell-to-cell transmission because the only difference in these pseudoviruses were the spike proteins,” said Liu, also a director of the Viruses and Emerging Pathogens Program in OSU’s Infectious Diseases Institute.

Source link

You Might Also Like!
Risk of Death From COVID in Nursing Homes: Race Matters
Risk of Death From COVID in Nursing Homes: Race Matters

Ouslander agreed. "We all have a social responsibility," he said. "Just because you're not going into a nursing home," he ENGAGE+

When Will Kids Get COVID Vaccines?
When Will Kids Get COVID Vaccines?

MONDAY, Feb. 15, 2021 (HealthDay News) -- For parents with questions about COVID-19 vaccines and children, Johns Hopkins Medicine experts ENGAGE+

Covid in Scotland: Youngest pupils to return to classrooms
Covid in Scotland: Youngest pupils to return to classrooms

Pupils in P1 to P3 and pre-school children will go back from 22 February, it has been confirmed. Source link

COVID Death Risk Is 3.5 Times That of Influenza
COVID Death Risk Is 3.5 Times That of Influenza

MONDAY, Feb. 15, 2021 (HealthDay News) -- The risk of death from COVID-19 is more than triple that from seasonal ENGAGE+

Covid: Extra 1.7m vulnerable added to shielding list
Covid: Extra 1.7m vulnerable added to shielding list

The move brings the total to 4m in England and means vaccinations will be prioritised more quickly. Source link

Covid variants: What are they and will vaccines work?’
Covid variants: What are they and will vaccines work?’

The UK is stepping up testing to find and stop cases from spreading in the community. Source link

Covid: What are the UK's lockdown rules and when will they be reviewed?
Covid: What are the UK's lockdown rules and when will they be reviewed?

People across the country have been urged to "double down" and stick to the lockdown rules. Source link

Covid vaccine impact revealed in over-80s blood tests
Covid vaccine impact revealed in over-80s blood tests

More people in this age group in England now have detectable antibodies that can fight the virus. Source link