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  • Type I interferon autoantibodies are associated with systemic immune alterations in patients with COVID-19.

Type I interferon autoantibodies are associated with systemic immune alterations in patients with COVID-19.

Science translational medicine (2021-08-26)
Monique G P van der Wijst, Sara E Vazquez, George C Hartoularos, Paul Bastard, Tianna Grant, Raymund Bueno, David S Lee, John R Greenland, Yang Sun, Richard Perez, Anton Ogorodnikov, Alyssa Ward, Sabrina A Mann, Kara L Lynch, Cassandra Yun, Diane V Havlir, Gabriel Chamie, Carina Marquez, Bryan Greenhouse, Michail S Lionakis, Philip J Norris, Larry J Dumont, Kathleen Kelly, Peng Zhang, Qian Zhang, Adrian Gervais, Tom Le Voyer, Alexander Whatley, Yichen Si, Ashley Byrne, Alexis J Combes, Arjun Arkal Rao, Yun S Song, Gabriela K Fragiadakis, Kirsten Kangelaris, Carolyn S Calfee, David J Erle, Carolyn Hendrickson, Matthew F Krummel, Prescott G Woodruff, Charles R Langelier, Jean-Laurent Casanova, Joseph L Derisi, Mark S Anderson, Chun Jimmie Ye
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.