Autoantibodies against chemokines post-SARS-CoV-2 infection correlate with disease course

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Abstract

Infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 associates with diverse symptoms, which can persist for months. While antiviral antibodies are protective, those targeting interferons and other immune factors are associated with adverse coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outcomes. Here we discovered that antibodies against specific chemokines were omnipresent post-COVID-19, were associated with favorable disease outcome and negatively correlated with the development of long COVID at 1 yr post-infection. Chemokine antibodies were also present in HIV-1 infection and autoimmune disorders, but they targeted different chemokines compared with COVID-19. Monoclonal antibodies derived from COVID-19 convalescents that bound to the chemokine N-loop impaired cell migration. Given the role of chemokines in orchestrating immune cell trafficking, naturally arising chemokine antibodies may modulate the inflammatory response and thus bear therapeutic potential.

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Muri, J., Cecchinato, V., Cavalli, A., Shanbhag, A. A., Matkovic, M., Biggiogero, M., … Robbiani, D. F. (2023). Autoantibodies against chemokines post-SARS-CoV-2 infection correlate with disease course. Nature Immunology, 24(4), 604–611. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-023-01445-w

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