City
Epaper

Discovery provides hope for early detection of serious Covid-19

By ANI | Updated: December 8, 2020 07:05 IST

Australian researchers have developed a way of testing whether or not Covid-19 patients' immune systems are gearing up to fight the virus that causes the deadly disease.

Open in App

Australian researchers have developed a way of testing whether or not Covid-19 patients' immune systems are gearing up to fight the virus that causes the deadly disease.

The researchers from QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute hope the discovery could be used to identify early on which patients' immune systems are not responding appropriately, and who might be at higher risk of becoming seriously unwell.

The prototype test detects high levels of two key chemical signals that are produced by T cells when they recognise SARS-CoV-2-infected cells and start to fight the infection. SARS-CoV-2 is a virus that causes COVID-19.

T cells are the immune cells that recognise and destroy cells infected with SARS-CoV-2.Study leader and the head of QIMR Berghofer's Translational and Human Immunology Group, Associate Professor Corey Smith, said the researchers examined blood donated by 44 Queenslanders who had recovered from COVID-19 to find out which combination of viral peptides could be used to stimulate T cells in the laboratory and allow researchers to measure their response to SARS-CoV-2.

"T cells produce a range of signalling molecules when they fight viruses," Associate Professor Smith said.

These signalling molecules are basically indicators of whether T cells are responding to the SARS-CoV-2 virus and are mobilising the immune army to launch an attack. If we can find a way to detect whether or not they are present, then we can find out whether or not a patient's immune system is responding as it should, Smith added.

"We isolated the T cells from the donated blood, exposed them to viral peptides, and measured the production of a number of different signalling molecules. We then compared the levels produced by T cells from the recovered COVID-19 patients with levels released by T cells from 20 healthy donors who had never been infected with SARS-CoV-2," said Smith.

The researchers found that T cells from people who had recovered from COVID-19 produced larger amounts of the signalling molecules interferon-gamma and interleukin-2, which are involved in killing virus-infected cells and encouraging other T cells to come to the infected area.

Details of the study have been published on Monday in the journal Clinical and Translational Immunology.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUkraine calls Miami meetings "productive, constructive", discusses development of 20-point plan with US

InternationalIndian H-1B visa holders who flew back to renew work permits left stranded

InternationalEpstein files: US Department of Justice reposts President Trump's photo

InternationalPakistan: Man allegedly opens fire inside house; kills wife, two women, one minor

InternationalRussia launched 1300 drones, 1200 guided aerial bombs at Ukraine over past week: Zelenskyy

Health Realted Stories

HealthHimachal CM launches campaign to administer polio drops to 6 lakh children

HealthNew bird flu case reported at duck farm in South Korea

HealthKey demands of contract nurses under consideration: TN Health Minister Ma Subramanian

HealthGovt to introduce bill against fake fertilisers, pesticides in next Parliament session

HealthPM POSHAN scheme serving fresh food to children in government schools in MP's Damoh