Sustained IFN signaling is associated with delayed development of SARS-CoV-2-specific immunity

Author:

Brunet-Ratnasingham ElsaORCID,Morin Sacha,Randolph Haley E.,Labrecque Marjorie,Bélair Justin,Lima-Barbosa Raphaël,Pagliuzza Amélie,Marchitto Lorie,Hultström Michael,Niessl Julia,Cloutier Rose,Sreng Flores Alina M.,Brassard Nathalie,Benlarbi Mehdi,Prévost Jérémie,Ding Shilei,Anand Sai Priya,Sannier Gérémy,Bareke Eric,Zeberg HugoORCID,Lipcsey Miklos,Frithiof RobertORCID,Larsson Anders,Zhou Sirui,Nakanishi TomokoORCID,Morrison David,Vezina Dani,Bourassa Catherine,Gendron-Lepage Gabrielle,Medjahed Halima,Point Floriane,Richard Jonathan,Larochelle Catherine,Prat Alexandre,Arbour Nathalie,Durand Madeleine,Brent Richards J,Moon Kevin,Chomont NicolasORCID,Finzi Andrés,Tétreault Martine,Barreiro Luis,Wolf Guy,Kaufmann Daniel E.ORCID

Abstract

SUMMARYPlasma RNAemia, delayed antibody responses and inflammation predict COVID-19 outcomes, but the mechanisms underlying these immunovirological patterns are poorly understood. We profile 782 longitudinal plasma samples from 318 hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Integrated analysis using k-means reveal four patient clusters in a discovery cohort: mechanically ventilated critically-ill cases are subdivided into good prognosis and high-fatality clusters (reproduced in a validation cohort), while non-critical survivors are delineated by high and low antibody responses. Only the high-fatality cluster is enriched for transcriptomic signatures associated with COVID-19 severity, and each cluster has distinct RBD-specific antibody elicitation kinetics. Both critical and non-critical clusters with delayed antibody responses exhibit sustained IFN signatures, which negatively correlate with contemporaneous RBD-specific IgG levels and absolute SARS-CoV-2-specific B and CD4+T cell frequencies. These data suggest that the “Interferon paradox” previously described in murine LCMV models is operative in COVID-19, with excessive IFN signaling delaying development of adaptive virus-specific immunity.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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