Coronavirus: How the common cold might protect you from COVID
An article inSciencerecently generated a lot of interest by providing a possible explanation of why COVID-19 can be deadly to some yet go virtually unnoticed in others.
Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology in California showed that infection with common cold coronaviruses can generate an immuneresponsethat resembles key pieces of the immune response generated by SARS-CoV-2—the virus that causes COVID-19. This raises the possibility that previous infection with one of the milder coronaviruses could make COVID-19 less severe. But how likely is this? And how does this relate to what we already know about coronaviruses?
A few weeks ago, adifferent articlesat at the center of the SARS-CoV-2 immunity debate. This one showed that the antibody response to SARS-CoV-2 may decline over time.
The findings raised concern that SARS-CoV-2 could infect a person many times and that a vaccine might not generate lasting protection. But the article focused on just one arm of the immune response, the B cells, which produceantibodiesthat help to clear an infection.
T cells are also key to theimmune response再一次。st viruses. They play a variety of roles, among them helping B cells to mature into disease-fighting machines. The article by Jose Mateus and colleagues at La Jolla Institute for Immunology is important because it shows that people keep T cells from the milder coronaviruses long enough to potentially interact with a new challenge by SARS-CoV-2 and that those Tcellsmight even recognize SARS-CoV-2 and help to clear theinfection.
The case for cross-immunity
For epidemiologists, the evidence of waning immunity and cross-immunity didn't come as a surprise.A study from 1990showed that soldiers infected with one of the milder coronaviruses didn't retain immunity for much longer than a year. Also, the boom-bust cycle that the milder coronaviruses undergo from year to yearcan be explainedby a mix of waning immunity and cross-immunity.
温和的冠状病毒可以产生类似的反bodies to the ones that are generated by the coronaviruses thatcause SARS and Mers. These antibodies are so similar that theynearly trickeda British Columbia care facility into thinking they had an outbreak of SARS after the SARS epidemic had been declared over. In fact, the outbreak was caused by OC43, one of the coronaviruses that causes the common cold.
Nevertheless, infections that generate structurally similar antibodies don't necessarily provide cross-protection in a medically meaningful way.
We're still just not sure
Evidence for cross-protection between all but the most closely related coronaviruses is scant.
It is difficult to say whether the milder coronaviruses protect against SARS-CoV-2 partly because we have done so little surveillance on them. Ideally, we would be able to look athistorical datato identify which communities experienced major outbreaks of each milder coronavirus strain over the past few years and then see if there is a link with less severe COVID-19 cases.
Challenge studies, in which a person is intentionally infected with a milder coronavirus strain and then exposed to SARS-CoV-2, could also address the question but are dangerous and ethically fraught. For now, all we can say is that the possibility that the common coronaviruses might protect against SARS-CoV-2 remains just that—a possibility. Indeed, Mateus and colleagues describe this theory as "highly speculative."
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This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.