Immune response to flu causes death in older people, not the virus, study suggests

A new study suggests that death from influenza virus in older people may be primarily caused by a damaging immune response to flu and not by the virus itself. The insight could lead to novel strategies for combating flu in the most vulnerable patients, said the researchers.

The study, demonstrates that replication of the flu virus alone is not enough to drive the deaths caused by seasonal flu, the researchers noted.

Ninety percent of the deaths attributed to flu each year worldwide occur in people aged 65 and older. To understand why older adults are more susceptible, the research team first observed the effect of flu infection on immune cells derived from young and older people. They found that the secretion of key antiviral proteins, known as interferons, was significantly reduced in older adults.

 

“It shows that older people may be more susceptible to influenza because they cannot mount an antiviral response,” said Akiko Iwasaki, professor of immunobiology, investigator, and the study’s senior author.

To prove that theory, the research team created mice models that mimicked the reduced immune response in older adults. Specifically, they blocked genes that enable the immune system to detect flu, allowing the virus to replicate unchecked. They determined that inflammation was behind the damage that leads to flu deaths.

“We found that the virus replication itself wasn’t enough to kill the mice, but needed the host response,” said Iwasaki. That response includes neutrophils, or white blood cells responsible for inflammation that fights infection. Neutrophils are activated by the inflammasomes, a heavy-duty inflammatory response reserved for virulent infections. While battling the virus, those cells also destroy tissue in the lungs.

The finding highlights potential new strategies for combating flu. “It has a lot of promise in terms of how we might treat older people who are infected with flu,” said Iwasaki. “If what we see in the mouse is true for humans, instead of trying to block virus replication, we should go after the immune cells that are destroying the lungs.” A drug that targets inflammation — either by blocking neutrophils or pro-inflammatory enzymes known as inflammasome caspases — could prolong survival in older people with flu, she said.

Source: Science daily

N.H.Kh

You might also like
Latest news
Ryabkov: If US moves to resume nuclear tests, Moscow will respond in kind Zionist occupation detained 25 Palestinians in the West Bank President Al-Assad meets Iranian Foreign Minister Zionist occupation killed 41,825 Palestinian civilians since last October Cuba: The US is complicit in terrorist violence Iran urges an immediate stop to Western countries’ arms delivery to the Zionist regime Maduro affirms his country’s rejection of Israeli attacks against Palestinian and Lebanese peoples Sabbagh meets with Araghchi in Damascus WHO: 73 healthcare workers killed in Lebanon due to the ongoing zionist attacks Zionist occupation kills 8 Palestinian civilians in the central of Gaza Strip The Organization of Islamic Cooperation Calls for an Immediate Cessation of Israeli Aggression on Ga... Two Israeli Soldiers Killed in a Resistance Operation by a Drone Iraqi Resistance Targets Three Israeli Enemy Sites with Drones Araghchi: Iran Will Use All its Diplomatic Capacities to Support Lebanon and the Region to Confront ... Syria Condemns the Israeli Aggression on the International Road Between Lebanon and Syria and Calls ... The Iranian Army Commander: The Israeli Enemy Will Receive a Severe and Destructive Response for Any... Arrivals from Lebanon Continue to Enter Syria on Foot Despite Israel Targeting the International Roa... The Lebanese Resistance: The Zionist Enemy Attacks the Civil Defense Teams in Violation of All Inter... Israeli Occupation Forces detain 27 Palestinians in the West Bank Tehran Holds Commemoration Ceremony in Honor of The Martyr Hassan Nasrallah