One-Stop Serum Assay Identifies COVID-19 Disease Severity and Vaccination Responses.
Natalie S HaddadDoan C NguyenMerin E KuruvillaAndrea Morrison-PorterFabliha AnamKevin S CashmanRichard P RamonellShuya KyuAnkur Singh SainiMonica Cabrera-MoraAndrew DerricoDavid AlterJohn D RobackMichael C HorwathJames B O'KeefeHenry M WuAn-Kwok Ian WongAlexandra W DretlerRia GripaldoAndrea N LaneHao WuHelen Y ChuSaeyun LeeMindy HernandezVanessa EngineerJohn VargheseRahul PatelAnum JalalVictoria FrenchIlya GuysenovChristopher E LaneTesfaye MengistsuKatherine Elizabeth NormileOnike MnzavaSang LeIgnacio SanzJohn L DaissFrances Eun-Hyung LeePublished in: ImmunoHorizons (2021)
SARS-CoV-2 has caused over 100,000,000 cases and almost 2,500,000 deaths globally. Comprehensive assessment of the multifaceted antiviral Ab response is critical for diagnosis, differentiation of severity, and characterization of long-term immunity, especially as COVID-19 vaccines become available. Severe disease is associated with early, massive plasmablast responses. We developed a multiplex immunoassay from serum/plasma of acutely infected and convalescent COVID-19 patients and prepandemic and postpandemic healthy adults. We measured IgA, IgG, and/or IgM against SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N), spike domain 1 (S1), S1-receptor binding domain (RBD) and S1-N-terminal domain. For diagnosis, the combined [IgA + IgG + IgM] or IgG levels measured for N, S1, and S1-RBD yielded area under the curve values ≥0.90. Virus-specific Ig levels were higher in patients with severe/critical compared with mild/moderate infections. A strong prozone effect was observed in sera from severe/critical patients-a possible source of underestimated Ab concentrations in previous studies. Mild/moderate patients displayed a slower rise and lower peak in anti-N and anti-S1 IgG levels compared with severe/critical patients, but anti-RBD IgG and neutralization responses reached similar levels at 2-4 mo after symptom onset. Measurement of the Ab responses in sera from 18 COVID-19-vaccinated patients revealed specific responses for the S1-RBD Ag and none against the N protein. This highly sensitive, SARS-CoV-2-specific, multiplex immunoassay measures the magnitude, complexity, and kinetics of the Ab response and can distinguish serum Ab responses from natural SARS-CoV-2 infections (mild or severe) and mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- end stage renal disease
- coronavirus disease
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- high throughput
- patient reported outcomes
- gene expression
- binding protein
- high resolution
- sensitive detection
- single molecule
- clinical evaluation