Autoreactive T cells of ankylosing spondylitis elicited by COVID-19 infection: A snapshot of immunological host defense and autoimmune imprinting.

Autoimmun Rev

Institute of Military Cognition and Brain Sciences, Academy of Military Medical Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China; Beijing Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, 27 Taiping Road, Beijing 100850, China. Electronic address:

Published: September 2023

The evolutionary emergence of adaptive immunity has significantly extended the lifespan of humans and other species. The adaptive immune system is essential for host survival and adaptation to the rapidly changing environment of potential pathogens; however, it also leads to self-antigen recognition that creates the risk of autoimmune disease. Although this mechanism is generally acknowledged, it is difficult to trace back to the initial causative event of pathogen infection that occurs long before the clinical onset of autoimmune disease. The recognitions of foreign-and self-antigens are faithfully registered by the individual's immune repertoire. In this study, through interrogating 1414 T-cell repertoires collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, we sought to trace the immunological host defense against COVID-19 infection, while investigating whether such disturbance of T-cell repertoire will lead to auto-reactive T cells. The percentages of ankylosing spondylitis-specific T cells were significantly increased with increasing COVID-19-specific T cells (p < 0.0001, rho = 0.38). This finding implies T cell cross-reactivity that leads to a plausible trade-off between the benefit of immunological host defense and the risk of autoimmune disease. As such, given that the immunological host defense serves as the top priority for improving host survival, the adaptive immune system may need to adapt to deadly threats at the expense of autoimmune diseases, most of which do not affect host reproduction and survival. This finding has important implications for the primary prevention of autoimmune disease and the vaccine design strategy for COVID-19. Moreover, this study provides a feasible workflow to profile the probability of T cell cross-reactivity and extrapolates the findings of autoimmune imprinting from bench to bedside.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.autrev.2023.103392DOI Listing

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