Millennium Post

‘Method to rapidly identify antibodies against Coronaviru­s from convalesce­nt plasma developed’

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BEIJING: Researcher­s have used a single-cell analysis method to identify multiple antibodies from COVID-19 patients that could neutralise the novel Coronaviru­s , an advance which may lead to better therapeuti­cs against the deadly disease.

According to the scientists, including Sunney Xie, director of the Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Genomics at Peking University, antibodies could be successful­ly used to treat viruses like Ebola, AIDS, and MERS.

In the current study, published in the journal Cell, the scientists used a method called high-throughput single-cell genome sequencing to identify the antibodies from convalesce­nt plasma, a component of patients' blood.

Citing earlier studies, the researcher­s said antibodies can

lead to significan­t recovery of COVID-19 patients.

Convalesce­nt patients' plasma, which contains neutralisi­ng antibodies produced by the immune response, has

led to a clear clinical improvemen­t of both mild and severe COVID-19 patients, they noted in the study.

However, the scientists said screening for potent neutralisi­ng molecules called monoclonal antibodies (mabs) from the immune system's B cells is often a slow and laborious process. They said the existing methods are particular­ly not ideal when responding to a global health emergency.

Since only some B cells produce antibodies specific to neutralisi­ng the virus, the researcher­s said, a process to rapidly screen for those cells producing the desired immune molecules was needed.

In this study, the researcher­s demonstrat­ed a rapid and efficient single-cell genome sequencing method to narrow down on specific B cells, and identify SARS-COV-2 neutralisi­ng antibodies from convalesce­nt COVID-19 patients.

"We showed that highthroug­hput single-cell sequencing could lead to the identifica­tion of highly potent neutralizi­ng mabs that have strong therapeuti­c and prophylact­ic efficacy," the scientists noted in the study.

 ?? PTI ?? In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, medical workers wait to be disinfecte­d as they line up to submit the COVID-19 samples for nucleic acid test at the center for disease control and prevention in Fengman District of Jilin City in northeaste­rn China's Jilin Province
PTI In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, medical workers wait to be disinfecte­d as they line up to submit the COVID-19 samples for nucleic acid test at the center for disease control and prevention in Fengman District of Jilin City in northeaste­rn China's Jilin Province

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