Microfluidic Immuno‐Serolomic Assay Reveals Systems Level Association with COVID‐19 Pathology and Vaccine Protection

Author:

Kim Dongjoo1,Biancon Giulia2,Bai Zhiliang1,VanOudenhove Jennifer2,Liu Yuxin2,Kothari Shalin2,Gowda Lohith2,Kwan Jennifer M.3,Buitrago‐Pocasangre Nicholas Carlos4,Lele Nikhil4,Asashima Hiromitsu4,Racke Michael K.5,Wilson JoDell E.5,Givens Tara S.5,Tomayko Mary M.67,Schulz Wade L.8,Longbrake Erin E.4,Hafler David A.49,Halene Stephanie271011,Fan Rong171112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Yale University New Haven CT 06520 USA

2. Section of Hematology Department of Internal Medicine Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

3. Cardiovascular Medicine Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

4. Department of Neurology Yale University New Haven CT 06520 USA

5. Quest Diagnostics Secaucus NJ 07094 USA

6. Departments of Dermatology Yale University New Haven CT 06520 USA

7. Department of Pathology Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

8. Department of Laboratory Medicine Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

9. Department of Immunobiology Yale University New Haven CT 06520 USA

10. Yale Center for RNA Science and Medicine Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

11. Yale Cancer Center and Stem Cell Center Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

12. Human and Translational Immunology Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT 06520 USA

Abstract

AbstractHow to develop highly informative serology assays to evaluate the quality of immune protection against coronavirus disease‐19 (COVID‐19) has been a global pursuit over the past years. Here, a microfluidic high‐plex immuno‐serolomic assay is developed to simultaneously measure50 plasma or serum samples for50 soluble markers including 35proteins, 11 anti‐spike/receptor binding domian (RBD) IgG antibodies spanningmajor variants, and controls. This assay demonstrates the quintuplicate test in a single run with high throughput, low sample volume, high reproducibilityand accuracy. It is applied to the measurement of 1012 blood samples including in‐depth analysis of sera from 127 patients and 21 healthy donors over multiple time points, either with acute COVID infection or vaccination. The protein analysis reveals distinct immune mediator modules that exhibit a reduced degree of diversity in protein‐protein cooperation in patients with hematologic malignancies or receiving B cell depletion therapy. Serological analysis identifies that COVID‐infected patients with hematologic malignancies display impaired anti‐RBD antibody response despite high level of anti‐spike IgG, which can be associated with limited clonotype diversity and functional deficiency in B cells. These findings underscore the importance to individualize immunization strategies for these high‐risk patients and provide an informative tool to monitor their responses at the systems level.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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