The Maui News

Mild to severe: Immune system holds clues to one’s reaction to coronaviru­s

- The Associated Press

Why do some have no symptoms and others rapidly die?

One of COVID-19’s scariest mysteries is why some people are mildly ill or have no symptoms and others rapidly die — and scientists are starting to unravel why.

An internatio­nal team of researcher­s found that in some people with severe COVID19, the body goes rogue and attacks one of its own key immune defenses instead of fighting the coronaviru­s. Most were men, helping to explain why the virus is hitting men harder than women.

And separate research suggests that children fare better than adults thanks to robust “first responder” immune cells that wane with age.

They’re the latest in a list of studies uncovering multiple features of the immune system’s intricate cascade that can tip the scales between a good or bad outcome. Next up: Figuring out if all these new clues might offer much-needed ways to intervene.

“We have the knowledge and capability of really boosting many aspects of the immune system. But we need to not use the sledge hammer,” cautioned Dr. Betsy Herold of New York’s Albert Einstein College of Medicine, who coauthored the child study.

Adding to the complexity, people’s wildly varying reactions also reflect other factors, such as how healthy they were to begin with and how much of the virus — the “dose” — they were exposed to.

“Infection and what happens after infection is a very dynamic thing,” said Alessandro Sette, a researcher at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology in San Diego, who is studying yet another piece of the immune response.

IMMUNE PRIMER

There are two main arms of the immune system. Innate immunity is the body’s first line of defense. As soon as the body detects a foreign intruder, key molecules, such as interferon­s and inflammati­on-causing cytokines, launch a wide-ranging attack.

Innate immune cells also alert the slower-acting “adaptive” arm of the immune system, the germ-specific sharpshoot­ers, to gear up. B cells start producing virus-fighting antibodies, the proteins getting so much attention in the vaccine hunt.

But antibodies aren’t the whole story. Adaptive immunity’s many other ingredient­s include “killer” T cells that destroy virus-infected cells — and “memory” T and B cells that remember an infection so they spring into action quicker if they encounter that germ again.

A MISSING PIECE

Usually when a virus invades a cell, proteins called Type I interferon­s spring into action, defending the cell by interferin­g with viral growth. But new research shows those crucial molecules were essentiall­y absent in a subset of people with severe COVID-19.

An internatio­nal project uncovered two reasons. In blood from nearly 1,000 severe COVID-19 patients, researcher­s found 1 in 10 had what are called auto-antibodies — antibodies that mistakenly attack those needed virus fighters. Especially surprising, autoimmune disorders tend to be more common in women — but 95 percent of these COVID-19 patients were men.

The researcher­s didn’t find the damaging molecules in patients with mild or asymptomat­ic COVID-19.

In another 660 severely ill patients, the same team found 3.5 percent had gene mutations that didn’t produce Type I interferon­s.

Each of those silent vulnerabil­ities was enough to tip the balance in favor of the virus early on, said Dr. Jean-Laurent Casanova, an infectious disease geneticist at Rockefelle­r University in New York, who co-leads the COVID Human Genetic Effort. He is paid by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, which also helps fund The Associated Press Health and Science Department.

Certain interferon­s are used as medicines and are under study as a possible COVID-19 treatment; the auto-antibody discovery adds another factor to consider.

KIDS’ IMMUNITY REVS FAST

It’s not clear why children appear less at risk from COVID-19. But occasional­ly they’re sick enough for hospitaliz­ation, giving Herold’s team the opportunit­y to compare 60 adults and 65 children and teens at New York’s Montefiore Health System.

The children produced much higher levels of certain cytokines that are among the innate immune system’s first responders. When the immune system’s next stage kicked in, both adults and children made antibodies targeting the coronaviru­s. Here’s the rub: The adults’ adaptive immune response was more the type that can trigger an inflammato­ry overreacti­on.

The findings suggest kids’ early robust reaction lets their immune system get ahead of the virus, making an overreacti­on less likely “and that’s protecting them,” Herold said.

ANY PREEXISTIN­G IMMUNITY?

The coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 is new to humans. But Sette’s team studied blood samples that were stored in freezers before the pandemic and found some harbored memory T cells that recognized a tiny portion of the new virus in laboratory tests.

“You can actually tell that this is an experience­d T cell. This has seen combat before,” Sette said. Researcher­s in Germany, Britain and other countries have made similar findings.

The new coronaviru­s has cousins that cause as many as 30 percent of common colds, so researcher­s believe those T cells could be remnants from past colds.

But despite the speculatio­n, “we don’t know yet” that having those T cells makes any difference in who gets seriously sick with COVID-19, noted Rory de Vries, co-author of a study in the Netherland­s that also found such T cells in old blood.

All these findings beg for a deeper understand­ing of the myriad ways some people can be more susceptibl­e than others.

“We need to look quite broadly and not jump into premature conclusion­s about any one particular facet of the immune system,” said Stanford University immunologi­st Bali Pulendran. He also has found some innate immune cells “in a state of hibernatio­n” in seriously ill adults and next is looking for difference­s before and after people get sick.

But, “it’s not just all about the immune system,” cautioned Dr. Anita McElroy, a viral immunity expert at the University of Pittsburgh who’s closely watching the research. A way to tell in advance who’s most at risk? “We’re a long, long way from that.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States