Suppression of Type I Interferon Signaling in Myeloid Cells by Autoantibodies in Severe COVID-19 Patients

Author:

Aoki Ami,Iwamura Chiaki,Kiuchi Masahiro,Tsuji Kaori,Sasaki Atsushi,Hishiya Takahisa,Hirasawa Rui,Kokubo Kota,Kuriyama Sachiko,Onodera Atsushi,Shimada Tadanaga,Nagaoka Tetsutaro,Ishikawa Satoru,Kojima Akira,Mito Haruki,Hase Ryota,Kasahara Yasunori,Kuriyama Naohide,Nakamura Sukeyuki,Urushibara Takashi,Kaneda Satoru,Sakao Seiichiro,Nishida Osamu,Takahashi Kazuhisa,Kimura Motoko Y.,Motohashi Shinichiro,Igari Hidetoshi,Ikehara Yuzuru,Nakajima Hiroshi,Suzuki Takuji,Hanaoka Hideki,Nakada Taka-aki,Kikuchi Toshiaki,Nakayama Toshinori,Yokote Koutaro,Hirahara KiyoshiORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Auto-antibodies (auto-abs) to type I interferons (IFNs) have been identified in patients with life-threatening coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), suggesting that the presence of auto-abs may be a risk factor for disease severity. We therefore investigated the mechanism underlying COVID-19 exacerbation induced by auto-abs to type I IFNs. Methods We evaluated plasma from 123 patients with COVID-19 to measure auto-abs to type I IFNs. We performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from the patients with auto-abs and conducted epitope mapping of the auto-abs. Results Three of 19 severe and 4 of 42 critical COVID-19 patients had neutralizing auto-abs to type I IFNs. Patients with auto-abs to type I IFNs showed no characteristic clinical features. scRNA-seq from 38 patients with COVID-19 revealed that IFN signaling in conventional dendritic cells and canonical monocytes was attenuated, and SARS-CoV-2-specific BCR repertoires were decreased in patients with auto-abs. Furthermore, auto-abs to IFN-α2 from COVID-19 patients with auto-abs recognized characteristic epitopes of IFN-α2, which binds to the receptor. Conclusion Auto-abs to type I IFN found in COVID-19 patients inhibited IFN signaling in dendritic cells and monocytes by blocking the binding of type I IFN to its receptor. The failure to properly induce production of an antibody to SARS-CoV-2 may be a causative factor of COVID-19 severity.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT Japan) Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research

Transformative Research Areas

Practical Research Project for Allergic Diseases and Immunology (Research on Allergic Diseases and Immunology) from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development, AMED

AMED-PRIME

AMED-CREST

JST FOREST Project

Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research

MSD Life Science Foundation, Public Interest Incorporated Foundation

Japanese Respiratory Foundation

Takeda Science Foundation

The Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases, Grant for Clinical Research Promotion

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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