[HTML][HTML] Unbiased discovery of autoantibodies associated with severe COVID-19 via genome-scale self-assembled DNA-barcoded protein libraries

JJ Credle, J Gunn, P Sangkhapreecha… - Nature biomedical …, 2022 - nature.com
JJ Credle, J Gunn, P Sangkhapreecha, DR Monaco, XA Zheng, HJ Tsai, A Wilbon…
Nature biomedical engineering, 2022nature.com
Pathogenic autoreactive antibodies that may be associated with life-threatening coronavirus
disease 2019 (COVID-19) remain to be identified. Here, we show that self-assembled
genome-scale libraries of full-length proteins covalently coupled to unique DNA barcodes
for analysis by sequencing can be used for the unbiased identification of autoreactive
antibodies in plasma samples. By screening 11,076 DNA-barcoded proteins expressed from
a sequence-verified human ORFeome library, the method, which we named MIPSA (for …
Abstract
Pathogenic autoreactive antibodies that may be associated with life-threatening coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remain to be identified. Here, we show that self-assembled genome-scale libraries of full-length proteins covalently coupled to unique DNA barcodes for analysis by sequencing can be used for the unbiased identification of autoreactive antibodies in plasma samples. By screening 11,076 DNA-barcoded proteins expressed from a sequence-verified human ORFeome library, the method, which we named MIPSA (for Molecular Indexing of Proteins by Self-Assembly), allowed us to detect circulating neutralizing type-I and type-III interferon (IFN) autoantibodies in five plasma samples from 55 patients with life-threatening COVID-19. In addition to identifying neutralizing type-I IFN-α and IFN-ω autoantibodies and other previously known autoreactive antibodies in patient plasma, MIPSA enabled the detection of as yet unidentified neutralizing type-III anti-IFN-λ3 autoantibodies that were not seen in healthy plasma samples or in convalescent plasma from ten non-hospitalized individuals with COVID-19. The low cost and simple workflow of MIPSA will facilitate unbiased high-throughput analyses of protein–antibody, protein–protein and protein–small-molecule interactions.
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