Pre-existing blood anti-interferon autoantibodies have been associated with susceptibility to severe COVID-19. However, nothing is known about the autoantibody response in the airway mucosa of mild to severe COVID-19 patients. We profiled longitudinal samples collected from the airway and matching blood of more than 100 donors over >18 months, spanning from mild COVID-19 to hospitalized patients in the ICU. We found that transiently induced anti-type I interferon autoantibodies in the nasal mucosa are a common feature and are associated with recovery from mild and moderate COVID-19.

To quantify the breadth of antibody response in blood and the airway site of infection, we developed flowBEAT, a novel flow cytometry-based assay capable of simultaneously measuring all 8 human antibody isotypes against 22 SARS-CoV-2 structural and non-structural antigens, including autoantigens. We identified the induction of nasal anti-type I interferon autoantibodies within the first two weeks of infection, waning with disease recovery. Notably, there was an inverse association between nasal and blood anti-interferon responses, while nasal anti-interferon was linked to recovery in cases of mild/moderate disease. In contrast, near-ubiquitous anti-interferon in the endotracheal aspirates of critical cases correlated with heightened airway hyper-inflammation. In both blood and mucosa, anti-interferon positively correlated with a broad anti-viral antibody response, including non-structural proteins. While nasal anti-interferon was universally transient, we identified a group of donors sustaining long-term blood anti-interferon autoantibodies who may be at risk for a more severe subsequent viral infection.

Within our longitudinal cohort, we assessed 500 infected-recovered and vaccinated samples and showed that nasal anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies are sustained over 18 months by repeated vaccination and boosting. We identified isotype signatures associated with disease severity and an autoantibody signature predictive of vaccine non-response. Thus, our findings emphasize the importance of continued vaccination/boosting to sustain nasal immunity and help prevent ongoing community spread. More importantly, our studies reveal predictive blood markers of protective nasal immunity and highlight a protective role for nasal anti-interferon autoantibodies in the immunopathology of COVID-19.

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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