Anti-chemokine antibodies after SARS-CoV-2 infection correlate with favorable disease course

Abstract
Infection by SARS-CoV-2 leads to diverse symptoms, which can persist for months. While antiviral antibodies are protective, those targeting interferons and other immune factors are associated with adverse COVID-19 outcomes. Instead, we discovered that antibodies against specific chemokines are omnipresent after COVID-19, associated with favorable disease, and predictive of lack of long COVID symptoms at one year post infection. Anti-chemokine antibodies are present also in HIV-1 and autoimmune disorders, but they target different chemokines than those in COVID-19. Finally, monoclonal antibodies derived from COVID- 19 convalescents that bind to the chemokine N-loop impair cell migration. Given the role of chemokines in orchestrating immune cell trafficking, naturally arising anti-chemokine antibodies associated with favorable COVID-19 may be beneficial by modulating the inflammatory response and thus bear therapeutic potential.
One-Sentence Summary Naturally arising anti-chemokine antibodies associate with favorable COVID-19 and are predictive of lack of long COVID.
Competing Interest Statement
The Institute for Research in Biomedicine has filed a provisional patent application in connection with this work on which JM, VCe, ACa, MUg and DFR are inventors.
Subject Area
- Biochemistry (7563)
- Bioengineering (5517)
- Bioinformatics (20777)
- Biophysics (10316)
- Cancer Biology (7973)
- Cell Biology (11629)
- Clinical Trials (138)
- Developmental Biology (6602)
- Ecology (10197)
- Epidemiology (2065)
- Evolutionary Biology (13605)
- Genetics (9537)
- Genomics (12842)
- Immunology (7919)
- Microbiology (19536)
- Molecular Biology (7653)
- Neuroscience (42050)
- Paleontology (307)
- Pathology (1257)
- Pharmacology and Toxicology (2199)
- Physiology (3266)
- Plant Biology (7036)
- Synthetic Biology (1951)
- Systems Biology (5426)
- Zoology (1115)