Even as the coronavirus pandemic began to grip the world in late February and early March, University of Virginia Ph.D. student Allie Donlan did not necessarily picture herself working on treatments for the strange new virus.
Donlan, a senior graduate student researcher in Dr. William Petri’s lab, was generally focused on the immune response to Clostridium difficile, or C. difficile, infection, and specifically focused on IL-13, a cytokine, or small protein, secreted by the immune system that was proving particularly helpful in fighting C. diff.
But Petri – a chaired professor of infectious diseases and international health at UVA and vice chair for research in the Department of Medicine – was curious if the immune response to the novel coronavirus could be manipulated to protect from COVID-19, as he and Donlan had observed with C. difficile. With the support of the Department of Pathology, Petri and Donlan began analyzing the immune response to the new coronavirus in samples from the first COVID-19 patients at UVA.
To Donlan’s surprise, they found the same cytokine that she had spent years studying: IL-13.