Why, after an apparently mild viral infection, do some patients still develop severe forms?
Researchers show that the presence, in some patients, of a particular type of antibody disrupts the antiviral response. This study, published in the journal Cell, is part of an international collaboration involving a total of 60 doctors or researchers, and has identified the immune cells responsible for producing anti-type I interferon antibodies in these patients.
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Type I interferons are essential proteins for antiviral defense. Some patients with severe forms of infectious diseases have high blood levels of antibodies directed against type I interferons. These autoantibodies are found in more than 10% of patients who develop severe pneumonia due to SARS-CoV2 infection (COVID-19).
Through the joint work of a consortium combining a unique mix of expertise in structural biology, protein-protein interaction modeling, and fine analysis of B lymphocytes, the researchers demonstrated that these immune cells producing autoantibodies are not induced in the context of COVID-19 but are already present before infection with SARS-CoV-2.
These cells also exhibit characteristics similar to those observed in certain genetic diseases affecting immune tolerance, particularly in their molecular targets on type I interferons and their ability to disrupt the antiviral response.