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  • P-II-0730

Prevalent and persistent new-onset autoantibodies in mild to severe COVID-19

Presented in

Infectious Biology Insights

Poster topics

Infectious Biology Insights

Authors

August F. Jernbom (Stockholm / SE), Lovisa Skoglund (Stockholm / SE), Elisa Pin (Stockholm / SE), Ronald Sjöberg (Stockholm / SE), Hanna Tegel (Stockholm / SE), Sophia Hober (Stockholm / SE), Anna Månberg (Stockholm / SE), Peter Nilsson (Stockholm / SE)

Abstract

Autoantibodies have been shown to be implied in COVID-19 but the emerging autoantibody repertoire remains largely unexplored. We investigated the new-onset autoantibody repertoire in 525 healthcare workers and hospitalized COVID-19 patients in five time points over 16 months using proteome-wide and targeted protein and peptide arrays. Our results show that prevalent new-onset autoantibodies against a wide range of antigens emerged following SARS-CoV-2 infection in relation to pre-infectious baseline samples and remained elevated for at least 12 months. We found an increased prevalence of new-onset autoantibodies after severe COVID-19 and demonstrated associations between distinct new-onset autoantibodies and neuropsychiatric symptoms post-COVID-19. Using epitope mapping, we determined the main epitopes of selected new-onset autoantibodies, validated them in independent cohorts of neuro-COVID and pre-pandemic healthy controls, and identified sequence similarities indicative of molecular mimicry between main epitopes and the conserved fusion peptide of the SARS-CoV-2 Spike glycoprotein. Our work describes the complexity and dynamics of the autoantibody repertoire emerging with COVID-19 and supports the need for continued analysis of the new-onset autoantibody repertoire to elucidate the mechanisms of the post-COVID-19 condition.

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