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Publication : Diverse functional autoantibodies in patients with COVID-19.

First Author  Wang EY Year  2021
Journal  Nature Volume  595
Issue  7866 Pages  283-288
PubMed ID  34010947 Mgi Jnum  J:335955
Mgi Id  MGI:7287769 Doi  10.1038/s41586-021-03631-y
Citation  Wang EY, et al. (2021) Diverse functional autoantibodies in patients with COVID-19. Nature 595(7866):283-288
abstractText  COVID-19 manifests with a wide spectrum of clinical phenotypes that are characterized by exaggerated and misdirected host immune responses(1-6). Although pathological innate immune activation is well-documented in severe disease(1), the effect of autoantibodies on disease progression is less well-defined. Here we use a high-throughput autoantibody discovery technique known as rapid extracellular antigen profiling(7) to screen a cohort of 194 individuals infected with SARS-CoV-2, comprising 172 patients with COVID-19 and 22 healthcare workers with mild disease or asymptomatic infection, for autoantibodies against 2,770 extracellular and secreted proteins (members of the exoproteome). We found that patients with COVID-19 exhibit marked increases in autoantibody reactivities as compared to uninfected individuals, and show a high prevalence of autoantibodies against immunomodulatory proteins (including cytokines, chemokines, complement components and cell-surface proteins). We established that these autoantibodies perturb immune function and impair virological control by inhibiting immunoreceptor signalling and by altering peripheral immune cell composition, and found that mouse surrogates of these autoantibodies increase disease severity in a mouse model of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Our analysis of autoantibodies against tissue-associated antigens revealed associations with specific clinical characteristics. Our findings suggest a pathological role for exoproteome-directed autoantibodies in COVID-19, with diverse effects on immune functionality and associations with clinical outcomes.
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