Autoantibodies linked to autoimmune diseases associate with COVID-19 outcomes

Author:

Baiocchi Gabriela CrispimORCID,Vojdani Aristo,Rosenberg Avi ZORCID,Vojdani ElroyORCID,Halpert GiladORCID,Ostrinski YuriORCID,Zyskind IsraelORCID,Filgueiras Igor SalernoORCID,Schimke Lena F.ORCID,Marques Alexandre H. C.ORCID,Giil Lasse M.ORCID,Lavi Yael BublilORCID,Silverberg Jonathan I.ORCID,Zimmerman Jason,Hill Dana Ashley,Thornton Amanda,Kim Myungjin,De Vito RobertaORCID,Fonseca Dennyson Leandro M.ORCID,Plaça Desireé RodriguesORCID,Freire Paula PaccielliORCID,Camara Niels Olsen SaraivaORCID,Calich Vera Lúcia GarciaORCID,Heidecke Harald,Lattin Miriam T.,Ochs Hans D.ORCID,Riemekasten GabrielaORCID,Amital HowardORCID,Cabral-Marques Otavio,Shoenfeld YehudaORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe SARS-CoV-2 infection is associated with increased levels of autoantibodies targeting immunological proteins such as cytokines and chemokines. Reports further indicate that COVID-19 patients may develop a wide spectrum of autoimmune diseases due to reasons not fully understood. Even so, the landscape of autoantibodies induced by SARS-CoV-2 infection remains uncharted territory. To gain more insight, we carried out a comprehensive assessment of autoantibodies known to be linked to diverse autoimmune diseases observed in COVID-19 patients, in a cohort of 248 individuals, of which171 were COVID-19 patients (74 with mild, 65 moderate, and 32 with severe disease) and 77were healthy controls. Dysregulated autoantibody serum levels, characterized mainly by elevated concentrations, occurred mostly in patients with moderate or severe COVID-19 infection, and was accompanied by a progressive disruption of physiologic IgG and IgA autoantibody signatures. A similar perturbation was found in patients with anosmia. Notably, autoantibody levels often accompanied anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody concentrations, being both indicated by random forest classification as strong predictors of COVID-19 outcome, together with age. Moreover, higher levels of autoantibodies (mainly IgGs) were seen in the elderly with severe disease compared with young COVID-19 patients with severe disease. These findings suggest that the SARS-CoV-2 infection induces a broader loss of self-tolerance than previously thought, providing new ideas for therapeutic interventions.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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