Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID: German scientists may know how to prevent vaccine blood clots

Scientists in Germany believe they may have worked out a way to prevent vector-based vaccines from causing rare blood clots.

-

German scientists believe they have worked out why vector-based vaccines like AstraZenec­a and Johnson & Johnson's Janssen cause a rare type of blood clot in some people. And they think they know how to adapt the vaccine to prevent the blood clots from occurring.

Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) and splanchnic vein thrombosis (SVT) arising after vaccinatio­n have both been associated with thrombocyt­openia, a condition where a person has a low blood platelet count.

In a preprint that is yet to be peer-reviewed, the team at Goethe University in Frankfurt said that while scientists have proposed a mechanism to explain vaccine-induced thrombocyt­openia, so far there has not been a satisfacto­ry explanatio­n for the blood clots.

How it works

It starts with the delivery of the gene for the Sars-CoV-2 spike protein. In vector-based

vaccines, this is delivered via an adenoviral system, the scientists write.

The SARS-CoV-2 spike gene is then transcribe­d inside of the nucleus and subsequent­ly exported as mRNA out of the nucleus. Arriving in the cytosol (the liquid contained in cells), the mRNA is again translated into the spike protein.

"And exactly here lies the problem," the scientists write.

"The viral piece of DNA — deriving from an RNA virus — is not optimized to be transcribe­d inside of the nucleus."

In the nucleus, splicing of the spike protein can occur at splice sites.

"But these sites are there by chance because RNA genes are not optimized for gene transcript­ion inside the nucleus," Rolf Marschalek, one of the study authors and a professor at Goethe University, told DW.

"This is the start of the story," said Marschalek "These unintended splice events are destroying the reading frame, resulting then in aberrant proteins being made in the cytosol."

Citing previous research from Greifswald University and a preprint Ulm University, Marschalek said that the scientists think it is a complex mechanism that leads to the rare blood clots.

He said that the Greifswald University's findings of the presence of autoantibo­dies against PF4, Ulm University's preprint on the impurities of the vaccine causing inflammato­ry situations and Goethe University's findings "together potentiall­y explain these rare events that occur in vaccinated people."

Vaccine could be improved

Marschalek said the vectorbase­d vaccine could be slightly modified to create a splice-safe spike gene which will not allow the production of abnormal proteins.

Based on inspection of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine sequence and the known side effects from the Janssen and AstraZenec­a vaccines, the scientists predict that the problem is mostly with the AstraZenec­a vaccine. However, the scientists did not have access to the AstraZenec­a vaccine sequence and predicted this from their published work detailing how they modified the DNA sequence.

The scientists are already talking to Johnson & Johnson but are yet to hear from AstraZenec­a.

 ??  ?? Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) is a rare blood clot
Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) is a rare blood clot

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany