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By August F. Jernbom et al.

Source Nature

Researchers found on the new-onset autoantibody repertoire in 525 healthcare workers and hospitalized COVID-19 patients,
prevalent new-onset autoantibodies against a wide range of antigens emerged following SARS-CoV-2 infection in relation to pre-infectious baseline samples and remained elevated for at least 12 months.

An increased prevalence of new-onset autoantibodies after severe COVID-19 was found and demonstrated associations between distinct new-onset autoantibodies and neuropsychiatric symptoms post-COVID-19.

It was found three new-onset autoantibodies associated with increased severity of neuropsychiatric symptoms post-COVID-19: anti-CALU, MYO16, and SNURF IgG.

SNURF is a small nuclear protein of unknown function, primarily expressed in brain and muscle tissues and cardiomyocytes.

Anti-SNURF IgG is highly prevalent without evidence of molecular mimicry, which may indicate epitope spreading to nuclear antigens.

 

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