An analysis of blood samples from patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 revealed that immune cells circulating in the blood, which were triggered by the gut's response to infection, were limited in number when compared to immune cells that had been triggered elsewhere in the body.
"Although the gut is considered an important portal of entry for the virus, the immune response in the blood of COVID-19 patients is dominated by lymphocytes, cells that protect the body from infection, that have been triggered by other areas of the body," said Sebastian Zundler, from the varsity's Department of Medicine.
The team used a technique called flow cytometry to detect and measure the different types of immune cells that were found in the blood samples of patients currently with COVID-19, patients recovered from COVID-19 and those free of the virus.
There is a special mechanism in the lymphoid tissue of the gut that triggers the production of an imprint marker called "a4b7 integrin". This marker causes T cells to head towards the gut to fight infection.