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Differential levels of IFNα subtypes in autoimmunity and viral infection

Authors :
Nassima Bekaddour
Ian N. Bruce
Tracy A Briggs
Stanislas Pol
David Hunt
Liis Haljasmägi
David A. Isenberg
Darragh Duffy
Kai Kisand
Jérémie Decalf
Mathieu P Rodero
Claudia Mauri
John A. Reynolds
Jean-Philippe Herbeuval
Madhvi Menon
Benno Schwikowski
Pierre Bost
Céline Posseme
J Eric Gottenberg
Vincent Bondet
Tineke Cantaert
Gillian I. Rice
Flore Rozenberg
Vinit Upasani
Xavier Mariette
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Type I interferons are essential for host response to viral infections, while dysregulation of their response can result in autoinflammation or autoimmunity. Among IFNα (alpha) responses, 13 subtypes exist that signal through the same receptor, but have been reported to have different effector functions. However, the lack of available tools for discriminating these closely related subtypes, in particular at the protein level, has restricted the study of their differential roles in disease. We developed a digital ELISA with specificity and high sensitivity for the IFNα2 subtype. Application of this assay, in parallel with our previously described pan-IFNα assay, allowed us to study different IFNα protein responses following cellular stimulation and in diverse patient cohorts. We observed different ratios of IFNα protein responses between viral infection and autoimmune patients. This analysis also revealed a small percentage of autoimmune patients with high IFNα2 protein measurements but low pan-IFNα measurements. Correlation with an ISG score and functional activity showed that in this small sub group of patients, IFNα2 protein measurements did not reflect its biological activity. This unusual phenotype was partly explained by the presence of anti-IFNα auto-antibodies in a subset of autoimmune patients. This study reports ultrasensitive assays for the study of IFNα proteins in patient samples and highlights the insights that can be obtained from the use of multiple phenotypic readouts in translational and clinical studies.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........83bd33cb39c61bc6e3ef2b23ce446c9c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.03.04.433900