International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Feb 2021)

Dynamic anti-spike protein antibody profiles in COVID-19 patients

  • Yujie Bao,
  • Yun Ling,
  • Ying-ying Chen,
  • Di Tian,
  • Guo-ping Zhao,
  • Xiang-hui Zhang,
  • Hong Hang,
  • Yu Li,
  • Bing Su,
  • Hong-zhou Lu,
  • Jie Xu,
  • Ying Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 103
pp. 540 – 548

Abstract

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Objectives: This study intended to investigate the dynamics of anti-spike (S) IgG and IgM antibodies in COVID-19 patients. Methods: Anti-S IgG/IgM was determined by a semi-quantitative fluorescence immunoassay in the plasma of COVID-19 patients at the manifestation and rehabilitation stages. The immunoreactivity to full-length S proteins, C-terminal domain (CTD), and N-terminal domain (NTD) of S1 fragments were determined by an ELISA assay. Clinical properties at admission and discharge were collected simultaneously. Results: The positive rates of anti-S IgG/IgM in COVID-19 patients were elevated after rehabilitation compared to the in-patients. Anti-S IgG and IgM were not apparent until day 14 and day ten, respectively, according to Simple Moving Average analysis with five days’ slide window deduction. More than 90% of the rehabilitation patients exhibited IgG and IgM responses targeting CTD-S1 fragments. Decreased total peripheral lymphocytes, CD4+ and CD8+ T cell counts were seen in COVID-19 patients at admission and recovered after the rehabilitation. Conclusions: Anti-S IgG and IgM do not appear at the onset with the decrease in T cells, making early serological screening less significant. However, the presence of high IgG and IgM to S1-CTD in the recovered patients highlights humoral responses after SARS-CoV-2 infection, which might be associated with efficient immune protection in COVID-19 patients.

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