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Model Shows How COVID-19 Could Lead to Runaway Inflammation

Tags
  • Innovation and Research
  • Department of Computational and Systems Biology
  • Covid-19

A study from the聽51精品视频 听补苍诲听聽addresses a mystery first raised in March: Why do some people with COVID-19 develop severe inflammation? The research shows how the molecular structure and sequence of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein鈥攑art of the virus that causes COVID-19鈥攃ould be behind the inflammatory syndrome cropping up in infected patients.

The study, published this week in the聽, uses computational modeling to zero in on a part of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein that may act as a 鈥渟uperantigen,鈥 kicking the immune system into overdrive as in聽toxic shock syndrome鈥攁 rare, life-threatening complication of bacterial infections.

Symptoms of a newly identified condition in pediatric COVID-19 patients, known as聽聽(MIS-C), include persistent fever and severe inflammation that can affect a host of bodily systems. While rare, the syndrome can be serious or even fatal.聽

The first reports of this condition coming out of Europe caught the attention of study co-senior author Moshe Arditi, director of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Immunology Division at Cedars-Sinai and an expert on another pediatric inflammatory disease鈥.

Arditi contacted his long-time collaborator, Ivet Bahar, distinguished professor and John K. Vries Chair of Computational and Systems Biology at 51精品视频鈥檚 School of Medicine, and the two started searching for features of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that might be responsible for MIS-C.

Bahar and her team created a computer model of the interaction between the SARS-CoV-2 viral spike protein and the receptors on human T cells, the foot soldiers of the immune system. Under normal circumstances, T cells help the body fight off infection, but when these cells are activated in abnormally large quantities, as is the case with superantigens, they produce massive amounts of inflammatory cytokines鈥攕mall proteins involved in immune system signaling鈥攊n what鈥檚 known as a cytokine storm.

Using this computer model, the team was able to see that a specific region on the spike protein with superantigenic features interacts with T cells. Then, they compared this region to a bacterial protein that causes toxic shock syndrome and found striking similarities in both sequence and structure. Importantly, the proposed SARS-CoV-2 superantigen showed a high affinity for binding T cell receptors鈥攖he first step toward touching off a runaway immune response.

鈥淓verything came one after another, each time a huge surprise. The pieces of the puzzle ended up fitting extremely well,鈥 said Bahar, co-senior author on the study.聽

By finding protein-level similarities between SARS-CoV-2 and the bacterial structure that causes toxic shock syndrome, the researchers said they may have opened up new avenues for treating not only MIS-C patients, but also adults with COVID-19 infection experiencing cytokine storm.

The researchers also collaborated with scientists studying adult COVID-19 patients in Germany and found that those who experienced severe symptoms had a T cell response similar to what is seen in people exposed to superantigens and very different from the T cell response in patients who had only mild symptoms.

鈥淥ur research finally begins to unravel the potential mechanisms involved and raises the possibility that therapeutic options for toxic shock syndrome, such as intravenous immunoglobulin and steroids, may be effective for managing and treating MIS-C in children and hyperinflammation in adult coronavirus patients,鈥 said Arditi, professor of pediatrics and biomedical sciences at Cedars-Sinai.

Arditi鈥檚 and Bahar鈥檚 labs are now using the ideas generated by this study to search for and test antibodies specific to the SARS-CoV-2 superantigen, with the goal of developing therapies that specifically address MIS-C and cytokine storm in COVID-19 patients.

This study was supported by the聽National Institutes of Health, as well as institutional funds.

Additional authors include first author Mary Hongying Cheng and She Zhang, both at 51精品视频; Rebecca Porritt and Magali Noval Rivas at Cedars-Sinai; and Lisa Paschold, Edith Willscher and Mascha Binder at聽Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg.