Loss of tolerance precedes triggering and lifelong persistence of pathogenic type I interferon autoantibodies.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_091D90E14C02
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Loss of tolerance precedes triggering and lifelong persistence of pathogenic type I interferon autoantibodies.
Journal
The Journal of experimental medicine
Author(s)
Fernbach S., Mair N.K., Abela I.A., Groen K., Kuratli R., Lork M., Thorball C.W., Bernasconi E., Filippidis P., Leuzinger K., Notter J., Rauch A., Hirsch H.H., Huber M., Günthard H.F., Fellay J., Kouyos R.D., Hale B.G.
Working group(s)
Swiss HIV Cohort Study
Contributor(s)
Abela I.A., Aebi-Popp K., Anagnostopoulos A., Battegay M., Bernasconi E., Braun D.L., Bucher H., Calmy A., Cavassini M., Ciuffi A., Dollenmaier G., Egger M., Elzi L., Fehr J., Fellay J., Furrer H., Fux C., Günthard H.F., Hachfeld A., Haerry D., Hasse B., Hirsch H., Hoffmann M., Hösli I., Huber M., Jackson-Perry D., Kahlert C., Kaiser L., Keiser O., Klimkait T., Kouyos R.D., Kovari H., Kusejko K., Labhardt N., Leuzinger K., Martinez de Tejada B., Marzolini C., Metzner K.J., Müller N., Nemeth J., Nicca D., Notter J., Paioni P., Pantaleo G., Perreau M., Rauch A., Salazar-Vizcaya L., Schmid P., Speck R., Stöckle M., Tarr P., Trkola A., Wandeler G., Weisser M., Yerly S.
ISSN
1540-9538 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0022-1007
Publication state
Published
Issued date
02/09/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
221
Number
9
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Autoantibodies neutralizing type I interferons (IFN-Is) can underlie infection severity. Here, we trace the development of these autoantibodies at high-resolution using longitudinal samples from 1,876 well-treated individuals living with HIV over a 35-year period. Similar to general populations, ∼1.9% of individuals acquired anti-IFN-I autoantibodies as they aged (median onset ∼63 years). Once detected, anti-IFN-I autoantibodies persisted lifelong, and titers increased over decades. Individuals developed distinct neutralizing and non-neutralizing autoantibody repertoires at discrete times that selectively targeted combinations of IFNα, IFNβ, and IFNω. Emergence of neutralizing anti-IFNα autoantibodies correlated with reduced baseline IFN-stimulated gene levels and was associated with subsequent susceptibility to severe COVID-19 several years later. Retrospective measurements revealed enrichment of pre-existing autoreactivity against other autoantigens in individuals who later developed anti-IFN-I autoantibodies, and there was evidence for prior viral infections or increased IFN at the time of anti-IFN-I autoantibody triggering. These analyses suggest that age-related loss of self-tolerance prior to IFN-I immune-triggering poses a risk of developing lifelong functional IFN-I deficiency.
Keywords
Humans, Autoantibodies/immunology, Interferon Type I/immunology, Middle Aged, Male, Female, COVID-19/immunology, Antibodies, Neutralizing/immunology, Adult, Aged, SARS-CoV-2/immunology, HIV Infections/immunology, Interferon-alpha/immunology, Retrospective Studies
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/07/2024 14:10
Last modification date
20/07/2024 7:07
Usage data