Tissue-specific autoantibody signatures reveal immune alterations undetected by routine serology in long COVID, 2026, Tatai et al.

Chandelier

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Tissue-specific autoantibody signatures reveal immune alterations undetected by routine serology in long COVID

Tatai, Ottó; Nagy, Szilárd; Nguyen, Trai Huynh Thanh; Tóth, Beáta Lajszné; Antal-Szalmás, Péter; Siket, Ivetta Mányiné; Pintér, Tamás Bence; Fagyas, Miklós; Papp, Zoltán; Csécsei, Péter; Lehoczki, Andrea; Szappanos, Ágnes; Ungvari, Zoltan; Molnár, Tihamér; Tóth, Attila

Abstract
Long COVID affects a substantial proportion of individuals recovering from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, yet its underlying pathophysiology remains poorly understood.
Although autoimmunity is increasingly implicated in disease pathogenesis, routine diagnostics frequently fail to detect relevant immune dysregulation.

To address this gap, we analyzed sera from Long COVID patients ( n = 114) and pre-pandemic controls ( n = 36) using tissue-based Western blotting targeting cardiac, pulmonary, and vascular antigens, alongside standard ANA HEp-2 testing.
Longitudinal samples were additionally evaluated to assess autoantibody dynamics.

Autoantibodies were detected in the majority of patients (83% vs. 53% in controls; p < 0.05), showing a dominant cardiovascular pattern.
While cardiac (54% vs. 33% in controls; p = 0.16) and pulmonary (34% vs. 30% in controls; p = 0.50) prevalences did not reach significance, vascular autoreactivity was markedly elevated in Long COVID (34% vs. 8% in controls; p < 0.05).
Responses exhibited broad polyreactivity and IgM dominance, with longitudinal follow-up showing persistent IgM and the emergence of additional isotypes.
Clinically, cardiac autoreactivity was associated with hypertension and headache, while the overall autoreactivity correlated with anosmia and ageusia.
In contrast, ANA HEp-2 testing showed no discriminatory value or clinical associations. Distinct autoreactivity patterns further aligned with female sex and clinical parameters (C-reactive protein, creatinine, troponin, body mass index).

Together, these findings reveal a high burden of tissue-specific autoantibodies invisible to standard ANA screening.
This persistent, IgM-skewed profile suggests ongoing immune dysregulation and may reflect a previously underrecognized component of the immunological response in long COVID, highlighting the need for targeted immunodiagnostic approaches beyond routine serology.

Web | DOI | PDF | GeroScience
 
This persistent, IgM-skewed profile suggests ongoing immune dysregulation and may reflect a previously underrecognized component of the immunological response in long COVID,

Or maybe that people with autoantibodies are more likely to go on feeling ill after Covid?

There does not seem to be a post-covid non-LC control group.
Some degree of autoreactivity after Covid would be consistent with a non-specific anamnestic response anyway. Some vascular autoreactivity might be significant but I cannot get excited about this.
 
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