New Delhi: Scientists have found that humans create antibodies targeting the same viral regions repeatedly, despite their ability to create a diverse repertoire of antibodies, and this, they say, could help explain a lot of reinfection patterns observed during the COVID-19 pandemic. The team of investigators, led by those at Brigham and Women's Hospital (US), said that these "public epitopes", or the viral protein locations where the antibody recurrently attaches itself, suggested the ability of a virus to mutate a single amino acid to reinfect a population of previously immune hosts.
"Our findings could help inform immune predictions and may change the way people think about immune strategies," said corresponding author Stephen J. Elledge, professor of Genetics at the Brigham. Their findings have been published in the journal Science. The investigators said that the studies so far had presented hints that people's immune systems didn't target epitopes at random, and that there was a method to it. They found in isolated examples a recurrent antibody responses across individuals. This meant that people recreated antibodies to home in on the same epitope, they said.
Antibodies are the Y-shaped sniffer dogs of the immune system that can find and flag foreign invaders. For this study, investigators analysed 569 blood samples from participants in the US, Peru, and France using VirScan, which can detect thousands of viral epitopes and give a snapshot of a person's immunological history from a single drop of blood.
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