학술논문

Autoantibodies Against Proteins Previously Associated With Autoimmunity in Adult and Pediatric Patients With COVID-19 and Children With MIS-C
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Immunization
Pediatric
Coronaviruses
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Coronaviruses Disparities and At-Risk Populations
Clinical Research
Autoimmune Disease
Infectious Diseases
Health Disparities
Rare Diseases
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Inflammatory and immune system
Adaptor Proteins
Signal Transducing
Adenosine Triphosphatases
Adult
Autoantibodies
Autoantigens
Autoimmune Diseases
Autoimmunity
COVID-19
Child
Humans
Immunoglobulins
Intravenous
Lupus Erythematosus
Systemic
Ribonucleoproteins
Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
autoantibodies
MIS-C multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children
IVIG
autoimmunity
Pediatric Emergency Medicine Kawasaki Group
Immunology
Medical Microbiology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Genetics
Language
Abstract
The antibody profile against autoantigens previously associated with autoimmune diseases and other human proteins in patients with COVID-19 or multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) remains poorly defined. Here we show that 30% of adults with COVID-19 had autoantibodies against the lung antigen KCNRG, and 34% had antibodies to the SLE-associated Smith-D3 protein. Children with COVID-19 rarely had autoantibodies; one of 59 children had GAD65 autoantibodies associated with acute onset of insulin-dependent diabetes. While autoantibodies associated with SLE/Sjögren's syndrome (Ro52, Ro60, and La) and/or autoimmune gastritis (gastric ATPase) were detected in 74% (40/54) of MIS-C patients, further analysis of these patients and of children with Kawasaki disease (KD), showed that the administration of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was largely responsible for detection of these autoantibodies in both groups of patients. Monitoring in vivo decay of the autoantibodies in MIS-C children showed that the IVIG-derived Ro52, Ro60, and La autoantibodies declined to undetectable levels by 45-60 days, but gastric ATPase autoantibodies declined more slowly requiring >100 days until undetectable. Further testing of IgG and/or IgA antibodies against a subset of potential targets identified by published autoantigen array studies of MIS-C failed to detect autoantibodies against most (16/18) of these proteins in patients with MIS-C who had not received IVIG. However, Troponin C2 and KLHL12 autoantibodies were detected in 2 of 20 and 1 of 20 patients with MIS-C, respectively. Overall, these results suggest that IVIG therapy may be a confounding factor in autoantibody measurements in MIS-C and that antibodies against antigens associated with autoimmune diseases or other human proteins are uncommon in MIS-C.