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Ultra-potent Antibody That can Offset All Omicron Variants Identified

by Colleen Fleiss on Oct 31 2022 11:39 PM
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The new finding lends support to efforts to develop and evaluate next-generation COVID-19 vaccines that could be delivered intranasally.

Ultra-potent Antibody That can Offset All Omicron Variants Identified
S2X324, the pan-variant and ultra-potent neutralizing antibody that can offset Omicron variants has been discovered.
The team looked at several aspects of the effects of exposure to earlier forms of the SARS-CoV-2 spike antigen -- or immune-provoking protein -- on the immune system’s reaction to the Omicron variants.

New Antibody to Fight Omicron

Past studies from the same team have noted that the BA.1 Omicron variant emerged as a "major antigenic shift due to the unprecedented magnitude of immune evasion associated with this variant of concern".

They explained that mutations in two of the main antibody targets in the virus explain why there is markedly reduced antibody neutralizing ability against these variants, especially in people who have not received booster doses.

"As a result, an increasing number of reinfections are occurring," the researchers wrote, "even though these cases tend to be milder than in infections of immunologically naA-ve individuals".

The recent scientific studies in this area have been led by the labs of David Veesler, associate professor of biochemistry at the University of Washington in Seattle and Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, and Davide Corti of Humabs BioMed SA of Vir Biotechnology in Switzerland.

The Omicron variants appeared at the end of 2021 and have marked genetic differences from the ancestral SARS-CoV-2.

The many, distinct mutations in their infection machinery have enabled them to escape from antibodies elicited from the original series of vaccines, from a history of infection, or from both of those two immune-system training events.

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People who had a breakthrough infection after vaccination also produced neutralizing antibodies against these variants in the mucus lining the inside of their noses.

However, people who only received the vaccine did not generate antibodies in their nasal mucosa.

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The lead authors on the paper are from the Veesler lab, the Corti lab, and Washington University in St. Louis.

Source-IANS


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