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Longitudinal single-cell epitope and RNA-sequencing reveals the immunological impact of type 1 interferon autoantibodies in critical COVID-19: Anti-IFN antibodies in critical COVID-19 correlate with poor ISG response and upregulation of LAIR1 surface protein in PBMCs.

Authors :
van der Wijst MGP
Vazquez SE
Hartoularos GC
Bastard P
Grant T
Bueno R
Lee DS
Greenland JR
Sun Y
Perez R
Ogorodnikov A
Ward A
Mann SA
Lynch KL
Yun C
Havlir DV
Chamie G
Marquez C
Greenhouse B
Lionakis MS
Norris PJ
Dumont LJ
Kelly K
Zhang P
Zhang Q
Gervais A
Le Voyer T
Whatley A
Si Y
Byrne A
Combes AJ
Rao AA
Song YS
Fragiadakis GK
Kangelaris K
Calfee CS
Erle DJ
Hendrickson C
Krummel MF
Woodruff PG
Langelier CR
Casanova JL
Derisi JL
Anderson MS
Ye CJ
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2021 Mar 10. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Mar 10.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Type I interferon (IFN-I) neutralizing autoantibodies have been found in some critical COVID-19 patients; however, their prevalence and longitudinal dynamics across the disease severity scale, and functional effects on circulating leukocytes remain unknown. Here, in 284 COVID-19 patients, we found IFN-I autoantibodies in 19% of critical, 6% of severe and none of the moderate cases. Longitudinal profiling of over 600,000 peripheral blood mononuclear cells using multiplexed single-cell epitope and transcriptome sequencing from 54 COVID-19 patients, 15 non-COVID-19 patients and 11 non-hospitalized healthy controls, revealed a lack of IFN-I stimulated gene (ISG-I) response in myeloid cells from critical cases, including those producing anti-IFN-I autoantibodies. Moreover, surface protein analysis showed an inverse correlation of the inhibitory receptor LAIR-1 with ISG-I expression response early in the disease course. This aberrant ISG-I response in critical patients with and without IFN-I autoantibodies, supports a unifying model for disease pathogenesis involving ISG-I suppression via convergent mechanisms.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2692-8205
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33758859
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.03.09.434529