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Autoantibodies against Progranulin and IL-1 receptor antagonist due to immunogenic posttranslational isoforms contribute to hyperinflammation in critically ill COVID-19

Authors :
Frederik Seiler
Frank Lammert
Sebastian Mang
Onur Cetin
Matthias C. Reichert
Klaus Roemer
Andreas Link
Phiilpp Agne
Zanir Abdi
Sylvia Hartmann
Thorsten Pfuhl
Soeren L Becker
Angela Thiel-Bodenstaff
Christian Lensch
Frank Langer
Frank Neumann
Sixten Körper
Dominic Kaddu-Mulindwa
Christian Herr
Thomas Adams
Christoph Kessel
Lorenz Thurner
Bernhard Thurner
Klaus-Dieter Preuss
Konstantinos Christofyllakis
Sophie Roth
Marie-Christin Hoffmann
Theresa Bock
Bettina Friesenhahn-Ochs
Stephan Stilgenbauer
Dirk Foell
Evi Regitz
Vadim Lesan
Patrick Wächter
Yvan Fischer
Joerg Thomas Bittenbring
Jürgen Rissland
Carlos Metz
Philipp M. Lepper
Guy Danziger
Birgit Bette
Jan Pilch
Cihan Papan
Torben Rixecker
Claudia Schormann
Marcin Krawczyk
Stefan Lohse
Gereon Gaebelein
Johannes Lehmann
Angelika Bick
André Becker
Igor Kos
Hubert Schrezenmeier
Michael Boehm
Christian Werner
Moritz Bewarder
Robert Bals
Natalie Fadle
Sigrun Smola
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Hyperinflammation is frequently observed in patients with severe COVID-19. Inadequate and defective IFN type I responses against SARS-CoV-2, associated with autoantibodies in a proportion of patients, lead to severe courses of disease. In addition, hyperactive responses of the humoral immune system have been described. In the current study we investigated a possible role of neutralizing autoantibodies against anti-inflammatory mediators. Plasma from adult patients with severe and critical COVID-19 was screened by ELISA for antibodies against PGRN, IL-1-Ra, IL-10, IL-18BP, IL-22BP, IL-36-Ra, CD40, IFN-α2, IFN-γ, IFN-ω and serpinB1. Autoantibodies were characterized and the antigens were analyzed for immunogenic alterations. In a discovery cohort with severe to critical COVID-19 high titers of PGRN-autoantibodies were detected in 11 of 30 (36.7%), and of IL-1-Ra-autoantibodies in 14 of 30 (46.7%) patients. In a validation cohort of 64 patients with critical COVID-19 high-titer PGRN-Abs were detected in 25 (39%) and IL-1-Ra-Abs in 32 of 64 patients (50%). PGRN-Abs and IL-1-Ra-Abs belonged to IgM and several IgG subclasses. In separate cohorts with non-critical COVID-19, PGRN-Abs and IL-1-Ra-Abs were detected in low frequency (i.e. in < 5% of patients) and at low titers. Neither PGRN- nor IL-1-Ra-Abs were found in 40 healthy controls vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 or 188 unvaccinated healthy controls. PGRN-Abs were not cross-reactive against SARS-CoV-2 structural proteins nor against IL-1-Ra. Plasma levels of both free PGRN and free IL-1-Ra were significantly decreased in autoantibody-positive patients compared to Ab-negative and non-COVID-19 controls. In vitro PGRN-Abs from patients functionally reduced PGRN-dependent inhibition of TNF-α signaling, and IL-1-Ra-Abs from patients reduced IL-1-Ra- or anakinra-dependent inhibition of IL-1ß signaling. The pSer81 hyperphosphorylated PGRN isoform was exclusively detected in patients with high-titer PGRN-Abs; likewise, a hyperphosphorylated IL-1-Ra isoform was only found in patients with high-titer IL-1-Ra-Abs. Thr111 was identified as the hyperphophorylated amino acid of IL-1-Ra. In longitudinally collected samples hyperphosphorylated isoforms of both PGRN and IL-1-Ra emerged transiently, and preceded the appearance of autoantibodies. In hospitalized patients, the presence of IL-1-Ra-Abs or IL-1-Ra-Abs in combination with PGRN-Abs was associated with a higher morbidity and mortality.To conclude, neutralizing autoantibodies to IL-1-Ra and PGRN occur in a significant portion of patients with critical COVID-19, with a concomitant decrease in circulating free PGRN and IL-1-Ra, indicative of a misdirected, proinflammatory autoimmune response. The break of self-tolerance is likely caused by atypical hyperphosphorylated isoforms of both antigens, whose appearances precede autoantibody induction. Our data suggest that these immunogenic secondary modifications are induced by the SARS-CoV-2-infection itself or the inflammatory environment evoked by the infection and predispose for a critical course of COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........135eaed0d58d59c39aeccaea5458aaf7