Unveiling the autoreactome: Proteome-wide immunological fingerprints reveal the promise of plasma cell depleting therapy

Author:

Bodansky AaronORCID,Yu David JL,Rallistan Alysa,Kalaycioglu MugeORCID,Boonyaratanakornkit JimORCID,Green Damian J.ORCID,Gauthier JordanORCID,Turtle Cameron J.ORCID,Zorn KelseyORCID,O’Donovan Brian,Mandel-Brehm Caleigh,Asaki JamesORCID,Kortbawi Hannah,Kung Andrew F.,Rackaityte Elze,Wang Chung-YuORCID,Saxena AditiORCID,de Dios Kimberly,Masi Gianvito,Nowak Richard J.,O’Connor Kevin C.,Li Hao,Diaz Valentina E.,Casaletto Kaitlin B.,Gontrum Eva Q.,Chan Brandon,Kramer Joel H.,Wilson Michael R.,Utz Paul J.,Hill Joshua A.ORCID,Jackson Shaun W.ORCID,Anderson Mark S.,DeRisi Joseph L.

Abstract

AbstractThe prevalence and burden of autoimmune and autoantibody mediated disease is increasing worldwide, yet most disease etiologies remain unclear. Despite numerous new targeted immunomodulatory therapies, comprehensive approaches to apply and evaluate the effects of these treatments longitudinally are lacking. Here, we leverage advances in programmable-phage immunoprecipitation (PhIP-Seq) methodology to explore the modulation, or lack thereof, of proteome-wide autoantibody profiles in both health and disease. We demonstrate that each individual, regardless of disease state, possesses a distinct set of autoreactivities constituting a unique immunological fingerprint, or “autoreactome”, that is remarkably stable over years. In addition to uncovering important new biology, the autoreactome can be used to better evaluate the relative effectiveness of various therapies in altering autoantibody repertoires. We find that therapies targeting B-Cell Maturation Antigen (BCMA) profoundly alter an individual’s autoreactome, while anti-CD19 and CD-20 therapies have minimal effects, strongly suggesting a rationale for BCMA or other plasma cell targeted therapies in autoantibody mediated diseases.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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