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The unique applicability of the human placenta to the Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) concept: the placenta provides fundamental insights into human organ functions at multiple levels of biological organisation

Claudia Gundacker and Isabella Ellinger Reproductive Toxicology, Volume 96, September 2020, Pages 273-281 [more]

 

Toward personalization of asthma treatment according to trigger factors

Asthma is a severe and chronic disabling disease affecting more than 300 million people worldwide. While in the past few drugs for treatment of asthma were available, new treatment options are currently emerging which appear to...[more]

 

Molecular profiling of allergen-specific antibody responses may enhance success of specific immunotherapy

Rodríguez-Domínguez A, Berings M, Rohrbach A, Huang HJ, Curin M, Gevaert P, Matricardi PM, Valenta R, Vrtala S. Molecular Profiling of Allergen-Specific Antibody Responses May Enhance Success of Specific Immunotherapy. J Allergy...[more]

 

Anti-tumor activities of Panax quinquefolius saponins and potential biomarkers in prostate cancer

He S, Lyu F, Lou L, Liu L, Li S, Jakowitsch J, Ma Y.[more]

 

Transfer Learning Using a Multi-Scale and Multi-Network Ensemble for Skin Lesion Classification

A. Mahbod, G. Schaefer, Ch.Wang, G.Dorffner, R. Ecker, I. Ellinger [more]

 

A promising hypoallergen for immunotherapy of peanut allergy

Tscheppe A, Palmberger D, van Rijt L, Kalic T, Mayr V, Palladino C, Kitzmuller C, Hemmer W, Hafner C, Bublin M, van Ree R, Grabherr R, Radauer C, Breiteneder H: Development of a novel Ara h 2 hypoallergen with no IgE binding or...[more]

 

A Two-Stage U-Net Algorithm for Segmentation of Nuclei in H&E-Stained Tissues

Mahbod A., Schaefer G., Ellinger I., Ecker R., Smedby Ö., Wang C. (2019) In: Reyes-Aldasoro C., Janowczyk A., Veta M., Bankhead P., Sirinukunwattana K. (eds) Digital Pathology. ECDP 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol...[more]

 
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Inhaltsbereich

AID/APOBECs among important factors in body’s defence against SARS-CoV-2

Research team comprising Anastasia Meshcheryakova, Diana Mechtcheriakova and Peter Pietschmann from the Institute of Pathophysiology and Allergy Research has addressed the potential interrelations between AID/APOBECs and the SARS-CoV-2 virus, particularly in connection with the course of COVID-19 in different patients. This could provide a starting point for future clinical strategies to improve and strengthen individual antiviral response.

Together with their multifaceted action mechanisms, activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) and so-called APOBEC proteins are important factors in the body's immune response and offer fast and effective protection against a large number of DNA and RNA viruses. The task of AID is to strengthen the human immune response, while APOBECs are able to block the virus.

The defence mechanisms associated with AID/APOBECs in response to the coronavirus were assessed on the basis of integrative data mining and gene expression analyses, as part of a study conducted with international partners. It was found that members of the APOBEC family are preferentially expressed in a particular type of cell or tissue: "However, this does not mean that a particular cell type only expresses a particular member of the APOBEC family but that each cell type exhibits its own characteristic APOBEC repertoire," explains Diana Mechtcheriakova.

What is completely new is that the researchers found that APOBEC4 is highly expressed in cells and tissues that are points of attack for SARS-CoV-2. These include epithelial cells in the bronchi, in the lungs, in the trachea and in the nose. It was also found that there is an extremely high level of expression of both molecules (one of the members of the APOBEC family and ACE2, the entry receptor for SARS-CoV-2), in the gastrointestinal tract, in the heart and in the testis.

"Based on this knowledge, the clinical challenge in the future will be to characterise the antiviral cell status attributed to AID/APOBECs specific to patients and/or patient groups and to correlate the cell-type-specific AID/APOBEC gene expression signature with the organs affected by SARS-CoV-2 infection and the severity of COVID-19," explains Mechtcheriakova.

A particular role in this process is attributed to AID, since it co-determines the strength of an adaptive immune response. "The AID-driven, highly coordinated sequence of events, which all occur in specialised immunological lymphoid structures with germinal centres, results in the production of high-affinity antibodies by plasma cells or memory B cells. These antibodies are directed against the pathogen causing the disease, such as SARS-CoV-2, either in the course of infection or of an immune response to a vaccine," explains Anastasia Meshcheryakova. The role of these complex lymphoid structures and of AID is of great importance for our further understanding of the pathobiology of COVID-19, and consequently for the development of new therapeutic approaches.

The results of the study have now been published in the journal "Frontiers in Immunology”. The study was funded by the "Medical and Scientific fund of the Mayor of the Federal Capital Vienna", the " Foundation Fund to Promote the Fight against Tuberculosis and other Lung Diseases" as part of the special SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 call.

Service: Frontiers in Immunology, Viral Immunology
"AID and APOBECs as multifaceted intrinsic virus-restricting factors: emerging concepts in the light of COVID-19." Anastasia Meshcheryakova, Peter Pietschmann, Philip Zimmermann, Igor B. Rogozin and Diana Mechtcheriakova. Front. Immunol. doi:10.3389/fimmu.2021.690416.

Link to the paper

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.690416/full

Link to MedUni NEWS

https://www.meduniwien.ac.at/web/ueber-uns/news/2021/news-im-juli-2021/aid/apobecs-als-wichtiger-teil-der-koerpereigenen-abwehr-gegen-sars-cov-2/

 

 

 
 
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