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Why does COVID-19 make some people so sick? Israeli study may hold the key

According to researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, the SARS-CoV-2 virus has a "dramatic impact" on the immune systems of patients with severe cases of the disease, though the mechanism is not yet clear.

by  Abigail Klein Leichman and JNS
Published on  05-18-2020 16:40
Last modified: 05-18-2020 16:40
Israel not accepting flights from China, El Al suspends routeReuters / China Daily

Medical staff in protective suits treat a patient with pneumonia caused by the new coronavirus | File photo: Reuters / China Daily

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An immune system run amok may be responsible for some COVID-19 patients faring worse than others, suggests a new international study led by immunology researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science.

In the study, published in the journal Cell on May 7 under the title, "Host-viral infection maps reveal signatures of severe COVID-19 patients," researchers in the lab of Professor Ido Amit introduce Viral-Track, a computational method they have validated to systematically detect viruses from multiple models of infection. They applied Viral-Track to lung cell samples from three mild and six severe COVID-19 cases to study how the SARS-CoV-2 virus modifies the lung cellular landscape.

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They saw "a dramatic impact of the virus on the immune system of severe patients compared to mild cases," report the authors, including researchers from the Zheng Lab at Shenzhen Third People's Hospital in China and from Institut Pasteur in Paris.

In the lungs of patients severely affected by COVID-19, helpful alveolar macrophage immune cells appear to be replaced by a storm of harmful myeloid immune cells that intensify the impact of the virus.

Coauthor Amir Giladi said this immune system malfunction "represents the real mystery of coronavirus."

 "Applying Viral-Track to larger clinical cohorts could provide critical mechanistic understanding of SARS-CoV-2 interactions with its human host and devise new treatment strategies for severe patients," Amit's lab tweeted.

This could take the form of a drug to maintain the integrity of the helpful immune cells in the lung.

This article was first published by Israel21c.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

Tags: CoronavirusCOVID-19Israel

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