Long-term SARS-CoV-2-specific immune and inflammatory responses in individuals recovering from COVID-19 with and without post-acute symptoms
Michael J. Peluso(University of California, San Francisco), Timothy J. Henrich(University of California, San Francisco), Matthew A. Spinelli(University of California, San Francisco), Joanna Donatelli(University of California, San Francisco), Monica Gandhi(University of California, San Francisco), Rebecca Hoh(University of California, San Francisco), Terri Wrin, Saki Takahashi(Fukuoka Dental College), Amelia N. Deitchman(University of California, San Francisco), Christos J. Petropoulos, Viva Tai(University of California, San Francisco), Isabel Rodríguez-Barraquer(University of California, San Francisco), Keirstinne Turcios(University of California, San Francisco), Nikita S. Iyer(University of California, San Francisco), Emily A. Fehrman(University of California, San Francisco), Bryan Greenhouse(San Francisco General Hospital), Rachel L. Rutishauser(San Francisco General Hospital), Cassandra Thanh(University of California, San Francisco), Jill Hakim(University of California, San Francisco), Francesca Aweeka(University of California, San Francisco), Steven G. Deeks(University of California, San Francisco), Leonel Torres(University of California, San Francisco), J. Daniel Kelly(University of California, San Francisco), Yanel Hernandez(University of California, San Francisco), Lan Trinh, Christopher C. Nixon(University of California, San Francisco), Owen Janson(University of California, San Francisco), Sadie E. Munter(University of California, San Francisco), Jeffrey N. Martin(University of California, San Francisco)
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