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SARS-CoV-2

Jake Scott put the ID in COVID-19

6 November 2022 by Vincent Racaniello

Infectious Disease physician Jake Scott joins TWiV to provide a west coast clinical perspective on the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic with respect to the impact of vaccines, antivirals, variants of concern and mortality.

Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Alan Dove, Rich Condit,  and Kathy Spindler

Guest: Jake Scott

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Download TWiV 952 (63 MB .mp3, 104 min)
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Show notes at microbe.tv/twiv

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: coronavirus, COVID-19, monoclonal antibody, Omicron, pandemic, Paxlovid, SARS-CoV-2, viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV 951: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin

5 November 2022 by Vincent Racaniello

In his weekly clinical update Dr. Griffin discusses Influenza incidence and vaccine effectiveness during the southern hemisphere influenza season in Chile, Nirsevimab for prevention of RSV infection in healthy late-preterm and term infants, severe Monkeypox in hospitalized patients, reinfections with different SARS-CoV-2 Omicron subvariants, impact of community masking on COVID-19 in Bangladesh, unadjuvanted intranasal spike vaccine elicits protective mucosal immunity against sarbecoviruses, antibody responses to Omicron BA.4/BA.5 bivalent mRNA vaccine booster shot, immunogenicity of bivalent mRNA vaccine boosters, long-term gastrointestinal sequelae following COVID-19, evaluation of an automated text message–based program to reduce use of acute health care resources after hospital discharge, and how in adults with COVID-19, melatonin was assessed for effects on inflammatory markers, clinical signs and symptoms, and mortality.

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Download TWiV 951 (30 MB .mp3, 50 min)
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Show notes at microbe.tv/twiv

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: antiviral, coronavirus, COVID-19, delta, inflammation, influenza, Long Covid, marburg virus, monkeypox, monoclonal antibody, Omicron, pandemic, poliovirus, SARS-CoV-2, vaccine, vaccine booster, variant of concern, viral, virology, virus, viruses

Antibodies Against SARS-CoV-2 Nucleocapsid Protein May Not Be Reliable Markers for Infection in Vaccinated People

3 November 2022 by Gertrud U. Rey

by Gertrud U. Rey

You are fully vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 and have presumably never been infected with the virus. But how can you know for sure? One way to find out is by testing your blood for the presence of antibodies against the viral nucleocapsid protein, which can only be encountered during natural infection. This is because all of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccines used in the U.S. only encode the viral spike protein (none encode nucleocapsid [N] protein), and thus they only stimulate production of antibodies against spike. This approach differentiates between vaccine- and virus infection-induced antibodies and allows one to accurately determine whether a vaccinated person was naturally infected. Or so we thought until now.

Two recent letters to the editor of the Journal of Infection note that not every natural infection induces production of anti-nucleocapsid (or, “anti-N”) antibodies. The letters cast doubt on whether these antibodies are reliable markers for a prior SARS-CoV-2 infection.

The authors of the first letter measured antibody responses in 4,111 vaccinated and 974 unvaccinated Irish healthcare workers. Only 23 of the vaccinated participants, all of whom had received two doses of the Pfizer mRNA vaccine, experienced a SARS-CoV-2 infection at some time after vaccination. As expected, each of the 23 individuals had antibodies against the spike protein, but surprisingly, only six (26%) had detectable anti-N antibodies. In contrast, 82% of unvaccinated participants with a previous PCR-confirmed infection had detectable anti-N antibodies. This result suggests that anti-N antibodies may not be the most accurate indicators of a prior natural infection in vaccinated people; and it further implies that vaccinated individuals may neutralize incoming viruses early during infection, thus preventing and/or limiting their ability to develop antibodies against nucleocapsid protein.

The second letter, which was written in response to the first letter, confirmed and further substantiated these results. Citing data from serosurveys done in Japan, the authors showed that patients who were infected within two months of a third dose of the Pfizer mRNA vaccine were less likely to experience COVID-19 symptoms than patients who were infected 4-8 months after the third dose. These findings are in line with our current understanding of sterilizing immunity, a type of immunity that prevents both disease and infection, which appears to occur most often during the months following vaccination, when high levels of vaccine-induced antibodies probably sequester an incoming virus before it has a chance to infect cells. The authors also showed that participants infected within two months of their third vaccine dose had significantly lower levels of anti-N antibodies than those infected several months later. Although this result seems surprising at first, it actually further supports the notion that vaccination only induces sterilizing immunity for a short time after vaccination, when existing vaccine-induced anti-spike antibodies neutralize incoming virus before the immune system has a chance to respond to the virus and produce antibodies specific to the nucleocapsid protein.

The authors of both letters further mention that COVID-19 patients who experienced symptoms were more likely to have detectable anti-N antibodies than were patients without symptoms, an observation that is in agreement with serological surveys done before vaccines became available. This finding suggests that patients who developed symptoms did not have sterilizing immunity and were subject to a productive viral infection that led to the development of symptoms and production of antibodies to nucleocapsid and other viral proteins.

These two studies provide an interesting perspective of antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection in vaccinated people, and they may inform better strategies for gauging infection after vaccination.

Filed Under: Basic virology, Gertrud Rey Tagged With: antibodies, immunity, natural infection, nucleocapsid, nucleocapsid protein, SARS-CoV-2, spike glycoprotein, sterilizing immunity, vaccine-induced antibodies

TWiV 949: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin

29 October 2022 by Vincent Racaniello

In his weekly clinical update Dr. Griffin discusses progress toward poliomyelitis eradication in Pakistan, polio by the numbers , influenza and COVID-19 vaccination coverage among health care personnel, phase 1/2a safety and immunogenicity of an adenovirus 26 vector RSV vaccine encoding prefusion F in adults 18–50 years and RSV seropositive children 12–24 months, receipt of first and second doses of JYNNEOS vaccine for prevention of Monkeypox, distinguishing SARS-CoV-2 persistence and reinfection, Novavax NVX-COV2373 triggers potent neutralization of Omicron sub-lineages, association between regular physical activity and the protective effect of vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 in a South African case, COVID-19 outcomes in solid organ transplant recipients who received Tixagevimab-cilgavimab Prophylaxis and/or Bebtelovimab treatment, Omicron sublineage BA.2.75.2 exhibits extensive escape from neutralizing antibodies, and Tocilizumab versus Baricitinib in hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19.

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Show notes at microbe.tv/twiv

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: antiviral, coronavirus, COVID-19, delta, inflammation, influenza, Long Covid, marburg virus, monkeypox, monoclonal antibody, Omicron, pandemic, poliovirus, SARS-CoV-2, vaccine, vaccine booster, variant of concern, viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV 948: Breathless with David Quammen

23 October 2022 by Vincent Racaniello

David Quammen returns to TWiV to discuss how he wrote his new book ‘Breathless’, a story about the science and the scientists behind the race to understand the pandemic coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.

Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Rich Condit,  Kathy Spindler, and Brianne Barker

Guest: David Quammen

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Download TWiV 948 (68 MB .mp3, 114 min)
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Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: Breathless, coronavirus, COVID-19, david quammen, genome sequence, pandemic, SARS-CoV-2, vaccine, viral, virology, virus, viruses

TWiV 947: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin

22 October 2022 by Vincent Racaniello

In his weekly clinical update Dr. Griffin discusses the prediction of upcoming global infection burden of influenza seasons after relaxation of public health and social measures during the COVID-19 pandemic, severe COVID-19 outcomes after full vaccination of primary schedule and initial boosters, and how successful immunomodulators for treatment of COVID-19 have opened the pathway for comparative trials.

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Download TWiV 947 (20 MB .mp3, 34 min)
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Show notes at microbe.tv/twiv

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: antiviral, coronavirus, COVID-19, delta, inflammation, influenza, Long Covid, marburg virus, monkeypox, monoclonal antibody, Omicron, pandemic, poliovirus, SARS-CoV-2, vaccine, vaccine booster, variant of concern, viral, virology, virus, viruses

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by Vincent Racaniello

Earth’s virology Professor
Questions? virology@virology.ws

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