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[Preprint]. 2020 Jun 22:2020.04.29.20083717. Originally published 2020 May 3. [Version 2] doi: 10.1101/2020.04.29.20083717

Dominant extrafollicular B cell responses in severe COVID-19 disease correlate with robust viral-specific antibody production but poor clinical outcomes

Matthew Woodruff, Richard Ramonell, Kevin Cashman, Doan Nguyen, Ankur Saini, Natalie Haddad, Ariel Ley, Shuya Kyu, J Christina Howell, Tugba Ozturk, Saeyun Lee, Weirong Chen, Jacob Estrada, Andrea Morrison-Porter, Andrew Derrico, Fabliha Anam, Monika Sharma, Henry Wu, Sang Le, Scott Jenks, Christopher M Tipton, Wiliam Hu, F Eun-Hyung Lee, Ignacio Sanz
PMCID: PMC7276991  PMID: 32511635

Abstract

A wide clinical spectrum has become a hallmark of the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic, although its immunologic underpinnings remain to be defined. We have performed deep characterization of B cell responses through high-dimensional flow cytometry to reveal substantial heterogeneity in both effector and immature populations. More notably, critically ill patients displayed hallmarks of extrafollicular B cell activation as previously described in autoimmune settings. Extrafollicular activation correlated strongly with large antibody secreting cell expansion and early production of high levels of SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies. Yet, these patients fared poorly with elevated inflammatory biomarkers, multi-organ failure, and death. Combined, the findings strongly indicate a major pathogenic role for immune activation in subsets of COVID-19 patients. Our study suggests that, as in autoimmunity, targeted immunomodulatory therapy may be beneficial in specific patient subpopulations that can be identified by careful immune profiling.

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