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<strong>US researchers have identified the reason why Covid-19 causes severe inflammation in some people, leading to acute respiratory distress and multi-organ damage.</strong></p>
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The study, led by researchers at Boston Children&#39;s Hospital, also finds that antibodies that people develop when they contract Covid-19 can sometimes lead to more inflammation, while antibodies generated by mRNA Covid-19 vaccines seem not to.<br />
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These findings, detailed in the journal Nature, may have implications for using monoclonal antibodies to treat Covid-19, helping to explain why the treatment works only when given early.<br />
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&quot;It may be that later on, antibodies may help enhance inflammation. We may need to look at the properties of the antibodies,&quot; said Judy Lieberman from Boston Children&#39;s Programme in Cellular and Molecular Medicine.<br />
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In the study, the team analysed blood samples from patients with Covid and compared these with samples from healthy people and patients with other respiratory conditions.<br />
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They found that SARS-CoV-2 can infect monocytes – immune cells in the blood that act as &quot;sentinels&quot; or early responders to infection – as well as macrophages, similar immune cells in the lungs. Once infected, both types of cells die a fiery death (called pyroptosis) that releases an explosion of powerful inflammatory alarm signals.<br />
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&quot;In the infected patients, about 6 per cent of blood monocytes were dying an inflammatory death,&quot; Lieberman said. &quot;That&#39;s a large number to find, because dying cells are rapidly eliminated from the body.&quot;<br />
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The team also examined the lung tissue from people who died from Covid, and found that about a quarter of the macrophages in the tissue were dying.<br />
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When the researchers studied the cells for signs of SARS-CoV-2, they found that about 10 per cent of monocytes and 8 per cent of lung macrophages were infected.<br />
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The fact that monocytes and macrophages can be infected with SARS-CoV-2 was a surprise, since monocytes don&#39;t carry ACE2 receptors, the classic entry portal for the virus, and macrophages have low amounts of ACE2.<br />
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Lieberman thinks SARS-CoV-2 infection of monocytes might have previously been missed in part because researchers often study frozen blood samples, in which dead cells do not show up.<br />
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While SARS-CoV-2 was able to infect monocytes and macrophages, it wasn&#39;t able to produce new infectious viruses. ItA may be because the cells died quickly from pyroptosis before new viruses could fully form, the researchers said.</p>
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