학술논문

Type I interferon autoantibodies are associated with systemic immune alterations in patients with COVID-19
Document Type
article
Author
van der Wijst, Monique GPVazquez, Sara EHartoularos, George CBastard, PaulGrant, TiannaBueno, RaymundLee, David SGreenland, John RSun, YangPerez, RichardOgorodnikov, AntonWard, AlyssaMann, Sabrina ALynch, Kara LYun, CassandraHavlir, Diane VChamie, GabrielMarquez, CarinaGreenhouse, BryanLionakis, Michail SNorris, Philip JDumont, Larry JKelly, KathleenZhang, PengZhang, QianGervais, AdrianLe Voyer, TomWhatley, AlexanderSi, YichenByrne, AshleyCombes, Alexis JRao, Arjun ArkalSong, Yun SFragiadakis, Gabriela KKangelaris, KirstenCalfee, Carolyn SErle, David JHendrickson, CarolynKrummel, Matthew FWoodruff, Prescott GLangelier, Charles RCasanova, Jean-LaurentDerisi, Joseph LAnderson, Mark SYe, Chun Jimmieconsortium, on behalf of the UCSF COMETAbe-Jones, YumikoAlvarenga, BonnyAsthana, SaurabhBeagle, AlexanderBhakta, TanviBhide, SharvariCai, CathyCalvo, MariaCarrillo, Sidney AChak, SuzannaCollins, ZacharyDandekar, RaviDarmanis, SpyrosEsmaili, ArmondGhale, RajaniGiberson, JeremyGlenn, PatGonzalez, AnaJauregui, AlejandraJones, NormanKe, SerenaLea, TashaLee, DeannaLelidowicz, AleskandraLiu, KathleenLota, RaphaelMatthay, MichaelMilush, JeffNguyen, VietNigam, NishitaOrtiz, GabePierce, LoganPrasad, PriyaRajan, JayantRashid, Ahmad SadeedRodriguez, NicklausSamad, BushraScarlet, DianeShaw, ColeSigman, AustinSinha, PratikSpitzer, MatthewTang, KevinAltamirano, Luz TorresTumurbaatar, ErdenWillmore, AndrewWilson, MichaelWithers, ReeseYee, KimberlyZamecnik, ColinZhan, JennyZhou, Mingyue
Source
Science Translational Medicine. 13(612)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Lung
Genetics
Autoimmune Disease
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Rare Diseases
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Research
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Inflammatory and immune system
Good Health and Well Being
Autoantibodies
COVID-19
Humans
Interferon Type I
UCSF COMET consortium
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Medical biotechnology
Biomedical engineering
Language
Abstract
Neutralizing autoantibodies against type I interferons (IFNs) have been found in some patients with critical coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). However, the prevalence of these antibodies, their longitudinal dynamics across the disease severity scale, and their functional effects on circulating leukocytes remain unknown. Here, in 284 patients with COVID-19, we found type I IFN–specific autoantibodies in peripheral blood samples from 19% of patients with critical disease and 6% of patients with severe disease. We found no type I IFN autoantibodies in individuals with moderate disease. Longitudinal profiling of over 600,000 peripheral blood mononuclear cells using multiplexed single-cell epitope and transcriptome sequencing from 54 patients with COVID-19 and 26 non–COVID-19 controls revealed a lack of type I IFN–stimulated gene (ISG-I) responses in myeloid cells from patients with critical disease. This was especially evident in dendritic cell populations isolated from patients with critical disease producing type I IFN–specific autoantibodies. Moreover, we found elevated expression of the inhibitory receptor leukocyte-associated immunoglobulin-like receptor 1 (LAIR1) on the surface of monocytes isolated from patients with critical disease early in the disease course. LAIR1 expression is inversely correlated with ISG-I expression response in patients with COVID-19 but is not expressed in healthy controls. The deficient ISG-I response observed in patients with critical COVID-19 with and without type I IFN–specific autoantibodies supports a unifying model for disease pathogenesis involving ISG-I suppression through convergent mechanisms.