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Common Cold Antibodies Yield Clues To COVID-19 Behavior

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  1. The Good Doctor

    The Good Doctor Golden Member

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    Among people who were never infected with the new coronavirus, a few adults—and many children—may have antibodies that can neutralize the virus, researchers reported in Science.

    Among 302 such adults, 16 (5.3%) had antibodies, likely generated during infections with "common cold" coronaviruses, that reacted to a specific region of the spike protein on the new virus called the S2 subunit. Among 48 children and adolescents, 21 (43.8%) had these antibodies.

    In laboratory experiments, serum from both older and younger uninfected individuals with cross-reactive antibodies could neutralize the new coronavirus. That was not the case with serum from study participants who lacked these antibodies.

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    "Together, these findings may help explain higher COVID-19 susceptibility in older people and provide insight into whether pre-established immunity to seasonal coronaviruses offers protection against SARS-CoV-2," the publishers of the journal said in a statement.

    The findings also suggest that targeting the S2 subunit on the coronavirus spike protein might be the basis for a drug or vaccine that works on multiple types of coronavirus.

    —Reuters Staff

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