“KU Leuven and UZ Leuven researchers map COVID-19 immune footprint and identify risk protein for mortality”

by time news

2023-05-22 22:21:08

© Shutterstock

Researchers from KU Leuven and UZ Leuven have succeeded in mapping an ‘immunological footprint’ of people who were infected with the corona virus. This shows that the presence of a certain protein increased the risk of dying from the virus.

tgBron: BELGIAN

The research was published Monday in the scientific journal Nature Aging.

In the summer of 2021, the researchers took samples of nasal mucus from more than 600 people who worked or lived in three residential care centers in Nivelles, Liège and Zaventem. A major covid outbreak had occurred in each of the care homes, with more than a fifth of residents who tested positive for the virus ultimately dying from the disease. However, almost all residents were vaccinated twice.

READ ALSO. After the death of seven vaccinated residents of a residential care center: what do we already know about the new Colombian variant? (+)

A striking difference in the three outbreaks was that they involved three different variants of the corona virus. In one of the centers it was the delta variant, another center was struggling with infections with the gamma variant, in the third center the mu variant, which is less well known to the general public, was circulating. The latter, the mu variant, was not considered a ‘worrying corona variant’, but an ‘interesting variant’.

Egg white

“It came as a surprise that the ‘not worrisome’ mu variant could also lead to so many deaths,” says immunologist Johan Van Weyenbergh (Rega Institute-KU Leuven). “That’s why we wanted to see how this could be explained, and what elements were common to the three outbreaks.”

The analyzes of the nasal swabs showed that the coronavirus was more likely to cause a fatal outcome in people who had a high amount of a certain cytokine protein in the immune system. “The protein causes an inflammatory response within the immune system of someone who is infected with the virus,” explains Van Weyenbergh. “The more cytokine protein was found in people’s nasal swabs, the faster they died.”

The research also revealed that the virus remained in the air for a very long time. Aerosols containing virus particles were still found in the residential care centers up to more than fifty days after the first case was detected. “This points to the importance of good ventilation,” says the immunologist. “

#Belgian #researchers #discover #presence #protein #predicts #risk #dying #covid

You may also like

Leave a Comment