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A distinct cross-reactive autoimmune response in multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C)

Bodansky, A.; Sabatino, J. J.; Vazquez, S.; Chou, J.; Novak, T.; Moffitt, K. L.; Miller, H.; Kung, A.; Rackaityte, E.; Zamecnik, C. R.; Rajan, J. V.; Kortbawi, H.; Mandel-Brehm, C.; Mitchell, A.; Wang, C.-Y.; Saxena, A.; Zorn, K.; Yu, D. J. L.; Asaki, J.; Pluvinage, J. V.; Wilson, M. R.; Loftis, L. L.; Hobbs, C. V.; Tarquinio, K. M.; Kong, M.; Fitzgerald, J. C.; Espinal, P. S.; Walker, T. C.; Schwartz, S. P.; Crandall, H.; Irby, K.; Staat, M. A.; Rowan, C. M.; Schuster, J. E.; Halasa, N. B.; Gertz, S. J.; Mack, E. H.; Maddux, A. B.; Cvijanovich, N. Z.; Zinter, M. S.; Zambrano, L. D.; Campbell,

2023-05-30 pediatrics
10.1101/2023.05.26.23290373 medRxiv
Show abstract

Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a severe, post-infectious sequela of SARS-CoV-2 infection, yet the pathophysiological mechanism connecting the infection to the broad inflammatory syndrome remains unknown. Here we leveraged a large set of MIS-C patient samples (n=199) to identify a distinct set of host proteins that are differentially targeted by patient autoantibodies relative to matched controls. We identified an autoreactive epitope within SNX8, a protein expressed primarily in immune cells which regulates an antiviral pathway associated with MIS-C pathogenesis. In parallel, we also probed the SARS-CoV-2 proteome-wide MIS-C patient antibody response and found it to be differentially reactive to a distinct domain of the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N) protein relative to controls. This viral N region and the mapped SNX8 epitope bear remarkable biochemical similarity. Furthermore, we find that many children with anti-SNX8 autoantibodies also have T-cells cross-reactive to both SNX8 and this distinct domain of the SARS-CoV-2 N protein. Together, these findings suggest that MIS-C patients develop a distinct immune response against the SARS-CoV-2 N protein that is associated with cross reactivity to the self-protein SNX8, demonstrating a link from the infection to the inflammatory syndrome.

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