New insights on what stimulates long-lived antibody production could spur better vaccines

Neither vaccinations nor immunity from infections seem to thwart SARS-CoV-2 for long. The frequency of new infections within a few months of a previous bout or a shot is one of COVID-19’s most vexing puzzles. Now, scientists have learned that a little-known type of immune cell in the bone marrow may play a major role in this failure.

The study, which appeared last month in Nature Medicine, found that people who received repeated doses of vaccine, and in some cases also became infected with SARS-CoV-2, largely failed to make special antibody-producing cells called long-lived plasma cells (LLPCs).

  • @some_guy
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    42 months ago

    Medical science is one of the few topics that consistently delivers good news.

    • @SoylentBlake@lemm.ee
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      12 months ago

      That never seems to make it out to the working people. I’ve read about so many amazing breakthrus but nothing out in the real world seems any different than 1999.

      • @some_guy
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        12 months ago

        Dunno about you, but I got a covid vax in March of 2021. I’m a working person. I stand by my claim.