IgM anti-ACE2 autoantibodies in severe COVID-19 activate complement and perturb vascular endothelial function.

Livia Casciola-Rosen, David R Thiemann,Felipe Andrade, Maria I Trejo-Zambrano,Elissa K Leonard, Jamie B Spangler,Nicole E Skinner, Justin Bailey, Srinivasan Yegnasubramanian,Rulin Wang, Ajay M Vaghasia,Anuj Gupta, Andrea L Cox,Stuart C Ray, Raleigh M Linville,Zhaobin Guo, Peter C Searson,Carolyn E Machamer, Stephen Desiderio,Lauren M Sauer, Oliver Laeyendecker, Brian T Garibaldi,Li Gao, Mahendra Damarla,Paul M Hassoun, Jody E Hooper,Christopher A Mecoli, Lisa Christopher-Stine,Laura Gutierrez-Alamillo, Qingyuan Yang,David Hines, William A Clarke,Richard E Rothman,Andrew Pekosz, Katherine Zj Fenstermacher,Zitong Wang, Scott L Zeger,Antony Rosen

JCI insight(2022)

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摘要
BackgroundSome clinical features of severe COVID-19 represent blood vessel damage induced by activation of host immune responses initiated by the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. We hypothesized autoantibodies against angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), the SARS-CoV-2 receptor expressed on vascular endothelium, are generated during COVID-19 and are of mechanistic importance.MethodsIn an opportunity sample of 118 COVID-19 inpatients, autoantibodies recognizing ACE2 were detected by ELISA. Binding properties of anti-ACE2 IgM were analyzed via biolayer interferometry. Effects of anti-ACE2 IgM on complement activation and endothelial function were demonstrated in a tissue-engineered pulmonary microvessel model.ResultsAnti-ACE2 IgM (not IgG) autoantibodies were associated with severe COVID-19 and found in 18/66 (27.2%) patients with severe disease compared with 2/52 (3.8%) of patients with moderate disease (OR 9.38, 95% CI 2.38-42.0; P = 0.0009). Anti-ACE2 IgM autoantibodies were rare (2/50) in non-COVID-19 ventilated patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome. Unexpectedly, ACE2-reactive IgM autoantibodies in COVID-19 did not undergo class-switching to IgG and had apparent KD values of 5.6-21.7 nM, indicating they are T cell independent. Anti-ACE2 IgMs activated complement and initiated complement-binding and functional changes in endothelial cells in microvessels, suggesting they contribute to the angiocentric pathology of COVID-19.ConclusionWe identify anti-ACE2 IgM as a mechanism-based biomarker strongly associated with severe clinical outcomes in SARS-CoV-2 infection, which has therapeutic implications.FUNDINGBill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates Philanthropy Partners, Donald B. and Dorothy L. Stabler Foundation, and Jerome L. Greene Foundation; NIH R01 AR073208, R01 AR069569, Institutional Research and Academic Career Development Award (5K12GM123914-03), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute R21HL145216, and Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (DGE1746891).
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