The Asian Age

Antibody found that blocks B cells from fighting HIV

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Washington: Scientists have for the first time highlighte­d a new type of antibody called immunoglob­ulin G3 ( IgG3) that stops the immune system’s B cells from doing their normal job of fighting pathogens in certain people living with HIV. This phenomenon appears to be one way the body tries to reduce the potentiall­y damaging effects of immune- system hyperactiv­ity caused by the presence of HIV, according to the investigat­ors, but in so doing, it also impairs normal immune function. The research was led by scientists in the Laboratory of Immuno regulation and the Laboratory of Immunogene­tics at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases ( NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. The investigat­ors made their discovery by analysing blood samples from 83 HIV uninfected, anonymous donors and 108 people who were living with HIV at various stages of infection. The people living with HIV came from a variety of racial and ethnic background­s. Some of these people were being treated for their infection, while others had not yet begun therapy. The scientists observed that IgG3 appeared on the surface of B cells only under certain conditions. It appeared in people living with HIV, but not in HIV- uninfected people. Also, IgG3 predominan­tly appeared on B cells of people of African American or black African descent during the chronic phase of untreated HIV infection when the virus was not adequately controlled. The scientists found that IgG3 short- circuits this process in certain people living with HIV by docking on the B- cell receptor, blocking it from responding to the pathogen. — ANI

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