Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds

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Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds
A human T cell from the immune system of a healthy donor.NIAID
  • A recent study found that some people who were never exposed to the coronavirus still have a type of T cell that can identify and react to it.
  • The scientists think this "head start" could be because of previous exposures to other coronaviruses, like those that cause the common cold.
  • The research also offers evidence that even patients with mild cases develop antibodies and virus-specific T cells that can protect them from future infections.
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Some people's immune systems may have a head start in fighting the coronavirus, recent research suggests.

A study published last month in the journal Cell found that some people who have never been exposed to the coronavirus nonetheless have helper T cells that are capable of recognizing and responding to it.

The likeliest explanation for the surprising finding, according to the researchers, is a phenomenon called cross reactivity: when helper T cells developed in response to another virus react to a similar but previously unknown pathogen.

In this case, those T cells may be left over from individuals' previous exposure to a different coronavirus — likely one of the four that cause common colds.

"You're starting with a little bit of an advantage — a head start in the arms race between the virus that wants to reproduce and the immune system wanting to eliminate it," Alessandro Sette, one of the study's co-authors, told Business Insider.

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He added that cross-reactive helper T cells could "help generate a faster, stronger immune response."

An immunological 'head start'

Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds
A commuter wears a mask while riding the New York City Subway as the coronavirus outbreak continues in Manhattan, New York, April 30, 2020.Lucas Jackson/Reuters

For their study, Sette's team examined the immune systems of 20 people who got the coronavirus and recovered, as well as blood samples from 20 people that had been collected between 2015 and 2018 (meaning there was no chance those people had been exposed to the new coronavirus).

Among the 20 confirmed COVID-19 patients, the researchers found, every individual had both white blood cells specifically engineered to fight the virus and the resulting antibodies.

"The data are suggestive that the average person makes a good immune response and may have immunity for some time," Shane Crotty, another co-author of the study, told Business Insider.

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He added this finding probably means that "the many vaccines people are trying to make should be able to replicate natural immunity."

Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds
A French rescue team wearing protective suits carry a COVID-19 patient at Strasbourg University hospital, March 16, 2020.Christian Hartmann/Reuters

Among the 20 people whose blood samples were taken before the pandemic, 50% had a type of white blood cell called CD4+ — T cells that help the immune system create antibodies — that the researchers found to be capable of recognizing the new coronavirus and prompting the immune system to fight back right away.

More research is needed to know whether or to what degree this cross reactivity influences how severe a case gets.

"It is too early to conclude that cross-reactivity with cold coronaviruses plays a role in the mild or severe clinical outcome of COVID-19 or the degree of infection in the populations," Maillère Bernard, a scientist at CEA/Université de Paris-Saclay in France who was not involved in the study, told Business Insider.

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Evidence for immunity

Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds
A health worker takes a blood sample for a COVID-19 antibody test in Los Angeles, California, May 20, 2020.Damian Dovarganes/AP

Among the group of coronavirus patients studied in the new research, only two had severe cases; the other 90% had either mild or moderate infections. The group was selected that way so the researchers could measure immune responses in average COVID-19 patients, not hospitalized cases. (An estimated 20% of coronaviruses cases are severe.)

"If you're looking at the exception rather than rule, it's hard to know what's going on," Crotty said. "If the average immune response looked terrible, it would be a big, red flag."

The researchers searched the patients' blood for two types of white blood cells: CD4+ cells and CD8+ cells, which are killer T cells that attack virus-infected cells.

The results showed that during the course of their infections, all 20 patients made antibodies and helper T cells capable of recognizing the coronavirus and responding accordingly, and 70% made killer T cells.

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This suggests the body will be able to identify and defend itself against the coronavirus in the future.

Some people may have an immunological 'head start' against new coronavirus, even if they've never been exposed, new research finds
A man is wheeled into an ambulance during the coronavirus outbreak in Manhattan, New York, March 27, 2020.REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

"Obviously we cannot tell you with a straight face what will happen 15 years from now, because the virus has only been around for a few months. So nobody knows whether this immune response is long-lived or not," Sette said.

But he thinks there's reason for optimism, especially for patients who had severe cases.

"The immune memory is related to the event. If it's a strong event, you'll have a strong memory," Sette added. "If you almost got run over by a truck you'll remember it, but you may not remember the color of the socks you wore yesterday because it's not a big deal."

Yuan Tian, a scientist at the Fred Hutch Institute in Seattle who was not involved in the research, told Business Insider that to learn more about how T cells relate to immunity, "it'd be interesting to study people with severe disease and compare the T-cell response between them and those with mild disease."

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That's next on the docket, according to Crotty.

"We're looking to identify T-cell response in the critically hospitalized," he said. "It's being done as we speak."

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