A new study has investigated the potential of proteins in common foods
to elicit protection against SARS-CoV-2. The researchers found that antibodies
that bind SARS-CoV-2 can also bind to proteins in certain foods, viruses,
vaccines, and common bacteria. The results suggest that exposure to such agents
may confer some protective immunity to Covid-19, but further research is needed
to confirm this.
Why do some people become seriously ill
with Covid-19, while others have no symptoms at all? The answer may lie in the
proteins our immune system has previously been exposed to. A recent study in
open-access journal Frontiers in Immunology finds that common foods, vaccines, bacteria and
viruses may all prime our immune system to attack SARS-CoV-2, the virus that
causes Covid-19. These agents all contain proteins that are similar to those
found in SARS-CoV-2. As such, exposure to these proteins may train our immune
system to respond when it encounters the virus. The study paves the way for new
immunotherapies or vaccines that lead to stronger immunity against Covid-19.
SARS-CoV-2:
comfort in the familiar?
SARS-CoV-2 is new, and the pandemic can
make it feel like an alien invader from another planet. However, it actually
shares features with many existing biological molecules.
As a member of the coronavirus family,
SARS-CoV-2 shares many characteristics with other viruses, but the similarities
don’t end there. Proteins present in bacteria, human cells, vaccines, and even
foods may all share similarities with those in SARS-CoV-2.The researchers behind
this latest study hypothesized that similarities between SARS-CoV-2 and other
common proteins may affect our susceptibility to the virus.
When our body is attacked by a pathogen,
such as a virus or bacterium, it launches an immune response that involves antibodies.
These immune proteins stick to specific parts of the pathogen and contribute to
its destruction. After the initial infection has subsided, white blood cells
called memory T and B cells will retain a memory of the pathogen, or at least
certain parts of its structure. These cells will be ready to mount an immune
response very rapidly if they ever encounter the pathogen again.
Testing
antibody cross-reactions
Could such an ‘immune memory’ to
proteins we have encountered in our past underlie immune resistance and reduced
susceptibility to Covid-19? To begin to test this hypothesis, these researchers
investigated whether antibodies that target proteins in the SARS-CoV-2 virus
could also bind to proteins in other agents, such as foods or common bacteria.
The researchers tested the ability of
these antibodies to bind to 180 different proteins from common foods, two
different vaccines, and 15 bacterial and viral proteins. The antibodies reacted
most strongly with a common gut bacterium called E.
faecalis and a vaccine against diphtheria,
tetanus, and pertussis. Interestingly, they also reacted very strongly against
proteins found in common foods, including broccoli, roasted almonds, pork,
cashews, milk, soy, and pineapple.
Eat for
immunity?
Unfortunately, you will likely not be
able to eat your way to Covid-19 immunity. ‘Immunity’ against a food type, for
instance, is typically characterized by a food allergy. “Usually only people
with leaky gut can make antibodies against food, so I wouldn’t actually recommend
eating foods that give you leaky gut, because this would give you a whole new
set of problems,” said Dr Aristo Vodjani of Cyrex Laboratories in Arizona, lead
author on the study.
Indeed, the researchers caution that
although these agents could potentially provide some protection from
SARS-CoV-2, they don’t envisage them as a replacement for current vaccines. In
addition, further testing is needed to confirm that these proteins do indeed
confer some protection, and if so, whether it is mediated through a short-lived
antibody response or a longer-term memory cell response.
The findings may shed some light on our variable responses to Covid-19 infection. With more research, these results could lead to more effective treatments or better vaccines against the virus. Another application may lie in assessing an individual’s susceptibility to the virus before they have even been infected.
Journal article: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1003094/full
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