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Discriminating promiscuous from target-specific autoantibodies in COVID-19

Authors

  • M. Lebedin
  • C. Vazquez Garcia
  • L. Spatt
  • C. Ratswohl
  • C. Thibeault
  • L. Ostendorf
  • T. Alexander
  • F. Paul
  • L.E. Sander
  • F. Kurth
  • K. de la Rosa

Journal

  • European Journal of Immunology

Citation

  • Eur J Immunol 53 (5): e2250210

Abstract

  • Diverse autoantibodies were suggested to contribute to severe outcomes of COVID-19, but their functional implications are largely unclear. ACE2, the SARS-CoV-2 receptor and a key regulator of blood pressure, was described to be one of many targets of autoantibodies in COVID-19. ACE2 in its soluble form (sACE2) is highly elevated in the blood of critically ill patients, raising the question of whether sACE2:spike complexes induce ACE2 reactivity. Screening 247 COVID-19 patients, we observed elevated sACE2 and anti-ACE2 IgG that poorly correlated. Interestingly, levels of IgGs recognizing ACE2, IFNα2, and CD26 strongly correlated in severe COVID-19, with 15% of sera showing polyreactivity versus 4.1% exhibiting target-directed autoimmunity. Promiscuous autoantibodies failed to impair the activity of ACE2 and IFNα2, while only specific anti-IFNα2 IgG compromised cytokine function. Our study suggests that the detection of autoantibodies in COVID-19 is often attributed to a promiscuous reactivity, potentially misinterpreted as target-specific autoimmunity with functional impact.


DOI

doi:10.1002/eji.202250210