Exploratory neuroimmune profiling identifies CNS-specific alterations in COVID-19 patients with neurological involvement
Author:
Song EricORCID, Bartley Christopher M.ORCID, Chow Ryan D., Ngo Thomas T., Jiang RuoyiORCID, Zamecnik Colin R., Dandekar Ravi, Loudermilk Rita P., Dai Yile, Liu Feimei, Hawes Isobel A., Alvarenga Bonny D., Huynh Trung, McAlpine Lindsay, Rahman Nur-Taz, Geng Bertie, Chiarella Jennifer, Goldman-Israelow Benjamin, Vogels Chantal B.F., Grubaugh Nathan D., Casanovas-Massana Arnau, Phinney Brett S., Salemi Michelle, Alexander Jessa, Gallego Juan A., Lencz Todd, Walsh Hannah, Lucas Carolina, Klein Jon, Mao Tianyang, Oh Jieun, Ring Aaron, Spudich Serena, Ko Albert I., Kleinstein Steven H., DeRisi Joseph L., Iwasaki AkikoORCID, Pleasure Samuel J., Wilson Michael R.ORCID, Farhadian Shelli F.
Abstract
AbstractOne third of COVID-19 patients develop significant neurological symptoms, yet SARS-CoV-2 is rarely detected in central nervous system (CNS) tissue, suggesting a potential role for parainfectious processes, including neuroimmune responses. We therefore examined immune parameters in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood samples from a cohort of patients with COVID-19 and significant neurological complications. We found divergent immunological responses in the CNS compartment, including increased levels of IL-12 and IL-12-associated innate and adaptive immune cell activation. Moreover, we found increased proportions of B cells in the CSF relative to the periphery and evidence of clonal expansion of CSF B cells, suggesting a divergent intrathecal humoral response to SARS-CoV-2. Indeed, all COVID-19 cases examined had anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies in the CSF whose target epitopes diverged from serum antibodies. We directly examined whether CSF resident antibodies target self-antigens and found a significant burden of CNS autoimmunity, with the CSF from most patients recognizing neural self-antigens. Finally, we produced a panel of monoclonal antibodies from patients’ CSF and show that these target both anti-viral and anti-neural antigens—including one mAb specific for the spike protein that also recognizes neural tissue. This exploratory immune survey reveals evidence of a compartmentalized and self-reactive immune response in the CNS meriting a more systematic evaluation of neurologically impaired COVID-19 patients.One Sentence SummaryA subset of COVID-19 patients with neurologic impairment show cerebrospinal fluid-specific immune alterations that point to both neuroinvasion and anti-neural autoimmunity as potential causes of impairment.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
16 articles.
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