Here’s Why Some People Are More Resilient To Covid-19

Covid-19 patients with milder symptoms tended to have lots of killer-T memory cells directed at peptides SARS-CoV-2 shared with other coronavirus strains.
Covid-19 patients with milder symptoms tended to have lots of killer-T memory cells directed at peptides SARS-CoV-2 shared with other coronavirus strains.

Many people experienced serious Covid-19 infection leading to hospitalization and even death, while some people escaped with milder symptoms.

The reason: They had prior run-ins with other coronaviruses — the ones that cause about a quarter of the common colds kids get, according to a study. Researchers from the Stanford University in the US showed that in such people, the immune cells are better equipped to mobilize quickly against SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for Covid-19. The immune cells, called killer T-cells, roam through the blood and lymph, park in tissues, and carry out stop-and-frisk operations on resident cells.


Covid-19 patients with milder symptoms tended to have lots of killer-T memory cells directed at peptides SARS-CoV-2 shared with other coronavirus strains.

Photo by Martin Sanchez on Unsplash

The study, published in the journal Science Immunology, showed that killer T-cells taken from the sickest Covid-19 patients exhibit fewer signs of having had previous run-ins with common-cold-causing coronaviruses. Many of these killer T cells were in "memory" mode, said Mark Davis, Professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford's School of Medicine. "Memory cells are by far the most active in infectious-disease defense. They're what you want to have in order to fight off a recurring pathogen. They're what vaccines are meant to generate," Davis said.

For the study, the team analyzed blood samples taken from healthy donors before the Covid-19 pandemic began, meaning they'd never encountered SARS-CoV-2 — although many presumably had been exposed to common-cold-causing coronavirus strains. They found that Covid-19 patients with milder symptoms tended to have lots of killer-T memory cells directed at peptides SARS-CoV-2 shared with other coronavirus strains.

Sicker patients' expanded killer T-cell counts were mainly among those T-cells typically targeting peptides unique to SARS-CoV-2 and, thus, probably had started from scratch in their response to the virus. "It may be that patients with severe Covid-19 hadn't been infected, at least not recently, by gentler coronavirus strains, so they didn't retain effective memory killer T cells," Davis said. (IANS/JC)

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
NewsGram
www.newsgram.com