How antibodies neutralise viruses in the respiratory tract. 
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White blood Cell Gives Protection Against Covid?

NewsGram Desk

Immunologists have discovered a previously unknown mechanism of a type of white blood cell that acts like a spider web, trapping and killing pathogens such as influenza or SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for Covid-19.

The researchers, from McMaster University in Canada, have found that neutrophils — the most abundant white blood cells in the human body — explode when they bind to such pathogens coated in antibodies and release DNA outside of the cell, creating a sticky tangle that acts as a trap.

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The findings, published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, are significant because little is understood about how antibodies neutralise viruses in the respiratory tract.

The discovery also has implications for vaccine design and delivery, including aerosol and nasal spray technologies that could help the body head off infections before they have a chance to take hold, the researchers said.

"Vaccines can produce these antibodies that are present in our lungs, which are the first type of antibody to see viruses like flu or Covid-19, which infect our lungs and respiratory tracts," says the study's lead author Matthew Miller, Associate Professor at McMaster's Michael G DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research.

"Mechanisms that can stop the infection at the site where it enters our body can prevent the spread and serious complications," he added.

By comparison, injectable vaccines are designed to bolster antibodies in the blood, but those antibodies are not as prevalent at the sites where the infection begins.


How antibodies neutralise viruses in the respiratory tract.

Photo by Unsplash

"We should be thinking carefully about next-generation Covid-19 vaccines that could be administered in the respiratory tract to stimulate antibodies," said lead author Hannah Stacey, a graduate student in the Miller's Lab.

"If you want a lot of these antibodies that are abundant in blood, then injections make the most sense, but if you want antibodies that are abundant in the respiratory tract, then a spray or an aerosol makes sense," she noted.

Researchers caution that while the body's spider-web mechanism has the potential to be hugely beneficial, it can cause harm too, including inflammation and further illness when the web formation is uncontrollable.

They point to the early waves of the pandemic, before vaccinations, when these NETs, or neutrophil extracellular traps, were found in some patients' lungs and had made their breathing more difficult. (IANS/AD)

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