Serological responses to human virome define clinical outcomes of Italian patients infected with SARS-CoV-2

对人类病毒组的血清学反应决定了意大利 SARS-CoV-2 感染患者的临床结果

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作者:Limin Wang, Julián Candia, Lichun Ma, Yongmei Zhao, Luisa Imberti, Alessandra Sottini, Eugenia Quiros-Roldan, Kerry Dobbs, Peter D Burbelo, Jeffrey I Cohen, Ottavia M Delmonte, Marshonna Forgues, Hui Liu, Helen F Matthews, Elana Shaw, Michael A Stack, Sarah E Weber, Yu Zhang, Andrea Lisco, Irini Ser

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is responsible for the pandemic respiratory infectious disease COVID-19. However, clinical manifestations and outcomes differ significantly among COVID-19 patients, ranging from asymptomatic to extremely severe, and it remains unclear what drives these disparities. Here, we studied 159 sequentially enrolled hospitalized patients with COVID-19-associated pneumonia from Brescia, Italy using the VirScan phage-display method to characterize circulating antibodies binding to 96,179 viral peptides encoded by 1,276 strains of human viruses. SARS-CoV-2 infection was associated with a marked increase in immune antibody repertoires against many known pathogenic and non-pathogenic human viruses. This antiviral antibody response was linked to longitudinal trajectories of disease severity and was further confirmed in additional 125 COVID-19 patients from the same geographical region in Northern Italy. By applying a machine-learning-based strategy, a viral exposure signature predictive of COVID-19-related disease severity linked to patient survival was developed and validated. These results provide a basis for understanding the role of memory B-cell repertoire to viral epitopes in COVID-19-related symptoms and suggest that a unique anti-viral antibody repertoire signature may be useful to define COVID-19 clinical severity.

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