ChinleShale said:
@Jarvis323
I read the article and not being a biologist have some elementary questions. Pardon the ignorance.
The article says that antibody levels alone do not indicate an effective immune reaction to SARS-COV-2 and that a needed secondary indicator is T-Cell function.
- Don't helper T-cells activate B-cells to produce anti-bodies? So wouldn't high levels of anti-bodies indicate strong T-Cell activity?
- I am a bit confused about killer T-cells. I read on line that they are covered with receptors that bind to a unique antigen. are these receptors produced during T-Cell formation in the thymus or are they formed in the presence of a new antigen? So is each person born with a library of killer T-cells that bind to a menu of predetermined antigens? If so, is this menu inherited or created during development?
This question is at the same time asking why killer T-cell functioning would be more or less strong since their receptors are predetermined? If their receptors are not predetermined how do they form as part of the immune response?
- The article seems to imply that a vaccine that targets multiple virus proteins may produce longer lasting protection. But the reasoning eluded me. The one thing I got was that with multiple protein immunity, immune responses to one kind of virus could also respond to a different virus that shares some of the same proteins.
Don't worry, I'm not an expert either. I hesitate to try to answer these questions, because I don't fully understand how T cells work either. It seems that the immune system is pretty complicated, and we can't say for sure what happens without experiment. A lot of our expectations come from what happened with other viruses and vaccines. It might be easy to come to a faulty understanding based on analytic reasoning alone. I can refer the research article, if that helps.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590136220300231?via=ihub
Here is another paper on the subject.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41590-020-0782-6
Based on what I've read, it would seem that one benefit of targeting multiple proteins is having redundancy, so that the virus needs more mutations to evade the immune system. In that sense, you might have more dependable long term protection, and it might be more difficult for the virus to adapt to evade the vaccine.
Sometimes it seems like antibodies play the biggest role, and other times T cells are more important. That is a major simplification. But for this virus, there is evidence that T cells are important, because antibody levels might wane fairly quickly, while memory T cells stick around. The observations of immune responses associated with less severe outcomes depending on T cells activity, and antibody levels, I don't understand. It's probably important to consider that that observation is about natural infection, where your body has no previous immunity, and is responding to the virus as it is attacking. After you get the vaccine, you have antibodies in advance of the virus attacking, and when the virus enters, it will be very small in small numbers, getting mopped up by the immune system before it gets out of hand and spreads all throughout your body.
Ultimately, we can't say for sure if the current vaccines will end up providing good long term protection. It has been reported that most of the vaccines do trigger a strong T cell response. Pfizer's vaccine was even described as triggering an 'impressive' T cell response. Compared to a 'broad spectrum' T cell response, I don't know? Whether the T cell response coming from the vaccine is narrowly targeting only the spike protein, or if it still leads to good cross reactivity with new variants, and other viruses, I don't know? It may mean, at least, that it should give some long lasting protection as long as the virus doesn't mutate too much.
As far as I can tell, so far the vaccines have been pretty successful within the scope of what they were designed to do. We are relying on the durability of the vaccine overcoming the adaptability of the virus. I guess we will find out more and more, especially now that the South African variant is spreading. They are testing whether the vaccines will work for that variant as we speak. It's worrisome because the spike protein has changed significantly. Experts are still seem to be hopeful it will still protect against that variant, at least to some extent. If we discover that the vaccine isn't effective for that variant, it will take about 6 weeks to make an updated vaccine.