iScience (Dec 2022)

Increased soluble HLA in COVID-19 present a disease-related, diverse immunopeptidome associated with T cell immunity

  • Annika Nelde,
  • Jonas Rieth,
  • Malte Roerden,
  • Marissa L. Dubbelaar,
  • Naomi Hoenisch Gravel,
  • Jens Bauer,
  • Reinhild Klein,
  • Tobias Hoheisel,
  • Hartmut Mahrhofer,
  • Siri Göpel,
  • Michael Bitzer,
  • Sebastian Hörber,
  • Andreas Peter,
  • Jonas S. Heitmann,
  • Juliane S. Walz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 12
p. 105643

Abstract

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Summary: HLA-presented antigenic peptides are central components of T cell-based immunity in infectious disease. Beside HLA molecules on cell surfaces, soluble HLA molecules (sHLA) are released in the blood suggested to impact cellular immune responses. We demonstrated that sHLA levels were significantly increased in COVID-19 patients and convalescent individuals compared to a control cohort and positively correlated with SARS-CoV-2-directed cellular immunity. Of note, patients with severe courses of COVID-19 showed reduced sHLA levels. Mass spectrometry-based characterization of sHLA-bound antigenic peptides, the so-called soluble immunopeptidome, revealed a COVID-19-associated increased diversity of HLA-presented peptides and identified a naturally presented SARS-CoV-2-derived peptide from the viral nucleoprotein in the plasma of COVID-19 patients. Of interest, sHLA serum levels directly correlated with the diversity of the soluble immunopeptidome. Together, these findings suggest an inflammation-driven release of sHLA in COVID-19, directly influencing the diversity of the soluble immunopeptidome with implications for SARS-CoV-2-directed T cell-based immunity and disease outcome.

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