Anti–spike IgG causes severe acute lung injury by skewing macrophage responses during acute SARS-CoV infection

Li Liu(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital), Qiang Wei(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Qingqing Lin(University of Hong Kong), Jun Fang(University of Hong Kong), Haibo Wang(University of Hong Kong), Hauyee Kwok(University of Hong Kong), Hangying Tang(University of Hong Kong), Kenji Nishiura(University of Hong Kong), Jie Peng(University of Hong Kong), Zhiwu Tan(University of Hong Kong), Tongjin Wu(University of Hong Kong), Ka‐Wai Cheung(University of Hong Kong), Kwok‐Hung Chan(University of Hong Kong), Xavier Álvarez(Tulane University), Chuan Qin(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Andrew A. Lackner(Tulane University), Stanley Perlman(University of Iowa), Kwok‐Yung Yuen(University of Hong Kong), Zhiwei Chen(Shenzhen Third People’s Hospital)
JCI Insight
February 20, 2019
Cited by 914Open Access
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Abstract

Newly emerging viruses, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV), Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome CoVs (MERS-CoV), and H7N9, cause fatal acute lung injury (ALI) by driving hypercytokinemia and aggressive inflammation through mechanisms that remain elusive. In SARS-CoV/macaque models, we determined that anti-spike IgG (S-IgG), in productively infected lungs, causes severe ALI by skewing inflammation-resolving response. Alveolar macrophages underwent functional polarization in acutely infected macaques, demonstrating simultaneously both proinflammatory and wound-healing characteristics. The presence of S-IgG prior to viral clearance, however, abrogated wound-healing responses and promoted MCP1 and IL-8 production and proinflammatory monocyte/macrophage recruitment and accumulation. Critically, patients who eventually died of SARS (hereafter referred to as deceased patients) displayed similarly accumulated pulmonary proinflammatory, absence of wound-healing macrophages, and faster neutralizing antibody responses. Their sera enhanced SARS-CoV-induced MCP1 and IL-8 production by human monocyte-derived wound-healing macrophages, whereas blockade of FcγR reduced such effects. Our findings reveal a mechanism responsible for virus-mediated ALI, define a pathological consequence of viral specific antibody response, and provide a potential target for treatment of SARS-CoV or other virus-mediated lung injury.


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