Pathogenic lipid-binding antiphospholipid antibodies are associated with severity of COVID-19

致病性脂质结合抗磷脂抗体与新冠肺炎的严重程度相关。

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作者:Anne Hollerbach ,Nadine Müller-Calleja ,Denise Pedrosa ,Antje Canisius ,Martin F Sprinzl ,Tanja Falter ,Heidi Rossmann ,Marc Bodenstein ,Christian Werner ,Ingo Sagoschen ,Thomas Münzel ,Oliver Schreiner ,Visvakanth Sivanathan ,Michael Reuter ,Johannes Niermann ,Peter R Galle ,Luc Teyton ,Wolfram Ruf ,Karl J Lackner

Abstract

Background: Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19)-associated coagulopathy is a hallmark of disease severity and poor prognosis. The key manifestations of this prothrombotic syndrome-microvascular thrombosis, stroke, and venous and pulmonary clots-are also observed in severe and catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome. Antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) are detectable in COVID-19 patients, but their association with the clinical course of COVID-19 remains unproven. Objectives: To analyze the presence and relevance of lipid-binding aPL in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Methods: Two cohorts of 53 and 121 patients from a single center hospitalized for PCR-proven severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus 2 infection were analyzed for the presence of aPL and clinical severity of COVID-19. Results: We here demonstrate that lipid-binding aPL are common in COVID-19. COVID-19 patients with lipid-binding aPL have higher median concentrations of C-reactive protein and D-dimer, and are more likely to have a critical clinical course and fatal outcome. Lipid-binding aPL isolated from COVID-19 patients target the recently described cell surface complex of lysobisphosphatidic acid (LBPA) with the protein C receptor (EPCR) to induce prothrombotic and inflammatory responses in monocytes and endothelial cells. We show that B1a cells producing lipid-reactive aPL of the IgG isotype circulate in the blood of COVID-19 patients. In vivo, COVID-19 aPL accelerate thrombus formation in an experimental mouse model dependent on the recently delineated signaling pathway involving EPCR-LBPA. Conclusions: COVID-19 patients rapidly expand B1a cells secreting pathogenic lipid-binding aPL with broad thrombotic and inflammatory effects. The association with markers of inflammation and coagulation, clinical severity, and mortality suggests a causal role of aPL in COVID-19-associated coagulopathy.

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