Rapid Generation of Neutralizing Antibody Responses in COVID-19 Patients

Mehul S. Suthar(Emory National Primate Research Center), Matthew G. Zimmerman(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Robert C. Kauffman(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Grace Mantus(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Susanne L. Linderman(Emory University), William Henry Hudson(Emory University), Abigail Vanderheiden(Emory National Primate Research Center), Lindsay E. Nyhoff(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Carl W. Davis(Emory University), Oluwaseyi Adekunle(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta), Maurizio Affer(Emory University), Melanie A. Sherman(Emory Healthcare), Stacian Reynolds(Emory Healthcare), Hans Verkerke(Emory University), David Alter(Emory University), Jeannette Guarner(Emory University), Janetta Bryksin(Emory University), Michael Horwath(Emory University), Connie M. Arthur(Emory University), Natia Saakadze(Emory University), Geoffrey Smith(Emory University), Srilatha Edupuganti(Emory University), Erin M. Scherer(Emory University), Kieffer Hellmeister(Emory University), Andrew Cheng(Emory University), Juliet Morales(HOPE Clinic), Andrew S. Neish(Emory University), Sean R. Stowell(Emory University), Filipp Frank(Emory University), Eric A. Ortlund(Emory University), Evan J. Anderson(Emory University), Vineet D. Menachery(The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston), Nadine Rouphael(Emory University), Aneesh K. Mehta(Emory University), David S. Stephens(Emory University), Rafi Ahmed(Emory University), John D. Roback(Emory University), Jens Wrammert(Children's Healthcare of Atlanta)
Cell Reports Medicine
June 1, 2020
Cited by 545Open Access
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Abstract

SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19, is causing a devastating worldwide pandemic, and there is a pressing need to understand the development, specificity, and neutralizing potency of humoral immune responses during acute infection. We report a cross-sectional study of antibody responses to the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the spike protein and virus neutralization activity in a cohort of 44 hospitalized COVID-19 patients. RBD-specific IgG responses are detectable in all patients 6 days after PCR confirmation. Isotype switching to IgG occurs rapidly, primarily to IgG1 and IgG3. Using a clinical SARS-CoV-2 isolate, neutralizing antibody titers are detectable in all patients by 6 days after PCR confirmation and correlate with RBD-specific binding IgG titers. The RBD-specific binding data were further validated in a clinical setting with 231 PCR-confirmed COVID-19 patient samples. These findings have implications for understanding protective immunity against SARS-CoV-2, therapeutic use of immune plasma, and development of much-needed vaccines.


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