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Highly versatile antibody binding assay for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 infection

Datta, Pratik; Ukey, Rahul; Bruiners, Natalie; Honnen, William; Carayannopoulos, Mary O; Reichman, Charles; Choudhary, Alok; Onyuka, Alberta; Handler, Deborah; Guerrini, Valentina; Mishra, Pankaj K; Dewald, Hannah K; Lardizabal, Alfred; Lederer, Leeba; Leiser, Aliza L; Hussain, Sabiha; Jagpal, Sugeet K; Radbel, Jared; Bhowmick, Tanaya; Horton, Daniel B; Barrett, Emily S; Xie, Yingda L; Fitzgerald-Bocarsly, Patricia; Weiss, Stanley H; Woortman, Melissa; Parmar, Heta; Roy, Jason; Dominguez-Bello, Maria Gloria; Blaser, Martin J; Carson, Jeffrey L; Panettieri, Reynold A; Libutti, Steven K; Raymond, Henry F; Pinter, Abraham; Gennaro, Maria Laura
Monitoring the burden and spread of infection with the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, whether within small communities or in large geographical settings, is of paramount importance for public health purposes. Serology, which detects the host antibody response to the infection, is the most appropriate tool for this task, since virus-derived markers are most reliably detected during the acute phase of infection. Here we show that our ELISA protocol, which is based on antibody binding to the Receptor Binding Domain (RBD) of the S1 subunit of the viral Spike protein expressed as a novel fusion protein, detects antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 vaccination. We also show that our ELISA is accurate and versatile. It compares favorably with commercial assays widely used in clinical practice to determine exposure to SARS-CoV-2. Moreover, our protocol accommodates use of various blood- and non-blood-derived biospecimens, such as breast milk, as well as dried blood obtained with microsampling cartridges that are appropriate for remote collection. As a result, our RBD-based ELISA protocols are well suited for seroepidemiology and other large-scale studies requiring parsimonious sample collection outside of healthcare settings.
PMCID:8288160
PMID: 34282427
ISSN: n/a
CID: 4948062

Vaccination boosts protective responses and counters SARS-CoV-2-induced pathogenic memory B cells

Mishra, Pankaj Kumar; Bruiners, Natalie; Ukey, Rahul; Datta, Pratik; Onyuka, Alberta; Handler, Deborah; Hussain, Sabiha; Honnen, William; Singh, Sukhwinder; Guerrini, Valentina; Yin, Yue; Dewald, Hannah; Choudhary, Alok; Horton, Daniel B; Barrett, Emily S; Roy, Jason; Weiss, Stanley H; Fitzgerald-Bocarsly, Patricia; Blaser, Martin J; Carson, Jeffrey L; Panettieri, Reynold A; Lardizabal, Alfred; Chang, Theresa Li-Yun; Pinter, Abraham; Gennaro, Maria Laura
Given the rapid spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and the recent implementation of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, we have much to learn about the duration of immune protection and the interface between the immune responses to infection and to vaccination. To address these questions, we monitored immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection in convalescent individuals over seven months and following mRNA vaccination. Spike Receptor-Binding-Domain (RBD)-specific circulating antibodies and plasma neutralizing activity generally decreased over time, whereas RBD-specific memory B cells persisted. Additionally, using antibody depletion techniques, we showed that the neutralizing activity of plasma specifically resides in the anti-RBD antibodies. More vigorous antibody and B cell responses to vaccination were observed in previously infected subjects relative to uninfected comparators, presumably due to immune priming by infection. SARS-CoV-2 infection also led to increased numbers of double negative B memory cells, which are described as a dysfunctional B cell subset. This effect was reversed by SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, providing a potential mechanistic explanation for the vaccination-induced reduction in symptoms in patients with "Long-COVID".
PMCID:8057254
PMID: 33880486
ISSN: n/a
CID: 4847132

Recurrence of Upper Extremity Deep Vein Thrombosis Secondary to COVID-19 [Case Report]

Parekh, Yesha H; Altomare, Nicole J; McDonnell, Erin P; Blaser, Martin J; Parikh, Payal D
Infection with SARS-CoV-2 leading to COVID-19 induces hyperinflammatory and hypercoagulable states, resulting in arterial and venous thromboembolic events. Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) has been well reported in COVID-19 patients. While most DVTs occur in a lower extremity, involvement of the upper extremity is uncommon. In this report, we describe the first reported patient with an upper extremity DVT recurrence secondary to COVID-19 infection.
PMCID:8151248
PMID: 34064763
ISSN: 1999-4915
CID: 4895382

Reshaping of the gastrointestinal microbiome alters atherosclerotic plaque inflammation resolution in mice

Garshick, Michael S; Nikain, Cyrus; Tawil, Michael; Pena, Stephanie; Barrett, Tessa J; Wu, Benjamin G; Gao, Zhan; Blaser, Martin J; Fisher, Edward A
Since alterations in the intestinal microbiota may induce systemic inflammation and polarization of macrophages to the M1 state, the microbiome role in atherosclerosis, an M1-driven disease, requires evaluation. We aimed to determine if antibiotic (Abx) induced alterations to the intestinal microbiota interferes with atherosclerotic plaque inflammation resolution after lipid-lowering in mice. Hyperlipidemic Apoe-/- mice were fed a western diet to develop aortic atherosclerosis with aortas then transplanted into normolipidemic wild-type (WT) mice to model clinically aggressive lipid management and promote atherosclerosis inflammation resolution. Gut microbial composition pre and post-transplant was altered via an enteral antibiotic or not. Post aortic transplant, after Abx treatment, while plaque size did not differ, compared to Apoe-/- mice, Abx- WT recipient mice had a 32% reduction in CD68-expressing cells (p = 0.02) vs. a non-significant 12% reduction in Abx+ WT mice. A trend toward an M1 plaque CD68-expresing cell phenotype was noted in Abx+ mice. By 16S rRNA sequence analysis, the Abx+ mice had reduced alpha diversity and increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes relative abundance ratio with a correlation between gut Firmicutes abundance and plaque CD68-expressing cell content (p < 0.05). These results indicate that in a murine atherosclerotic plaque inflammation resolution model, antibiotic-induced microbiome perturbation may blunt the effectiveness of lipid-lowering to reduce the content of plaque inflammatory CD68-expressing cells.
PMCID:8076321
PMID: 33903700
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 4889262

Correction: Helminth Colonization Is Associated with Increased Diversity of the Gut Microbiota

Lee, Soo Ching; Tang, Mei San; Lim, Yvonne A L; Choy, Seow Huey; Kurtz, Zachary D; Cox, Laura M; Gundra, Uma Mahesh; Cho, Ilseung; Bonneau, Richard; Blaser, Martin J; Chua, Kek Heng; Loke, P'ng
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002880.].
PMID: 33826625
ISSN: 1935-2735
CID: 4839322

Microbial genetic and transcriptional contributions to oxalate degradation by the gut microbiota in health and disease

Liu, Menghan; Devlin, Joseph C; Hu, Jiyuan; Volkova, Angelina; Battaglia, Thomas W; Ho, Melody; Asplin, John R; Byrd, Allyson; Loke, P'ng; Li, Huilin; Ruggles, Kelly V; Tsirigos, Aristotelis; Blaser, Martin J; Nazzal, Lama
Over-accumulation of oxalate in humans may lead to nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis. Humans lack endogenous oxalate degradation pathways (ODP), but intestinal microbes can degrade oxalate using multiple ODPs and protect against its absorption. The exact oxalate-degrading taxa in the human microbiota and their ODP have not been described. We leverage multi-omics data (>3000 samples from >1000 subjects) to show that the human microbiota primarily uses the type II ODP, rather than type I. Further, among the diverse ODP-encoding microbes, an oxalate autotroph, Oxalobacter formigenes, dominates this function transcriptionally. Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) frequently suffer from disrupted oxalate homeostasis and calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis. We show that the enteric oxalate level is elevated in IBD patients, with highest levels in Crohn's disease patients with both ileal and colonic involvement consistent with known nephrolithiasis risk. We show that the microbiota ODP expression is reduced in IBD patients, which may contribute to the disrupted oxalate homeostasis. The specific changes in ODP expression by several important taxa suggest that they play distinct roles in IBD-induced nephrolithiasis risk. Lastly, we colonize mice that are maintained in the gnotobiotic facility with O. formigenes, using either a laboratory isolate or an isolate we cultured from human stools, and observed a significant reduction in host fecal and urine oxalate levels, supporting our in silico prediction of the importance of the microbiome, particularly O. formigenes in host oxalate homeostasis.
PMID: 33769280
ISSN: 2050-084x
CID: 4823012

The hygiene hypothesis, the COVID pandemic, and consequences for the human microbiome

Finlay, B Brett; Amato, Katherine R; Azad, Meghan; Blaser, Martin J; Bosch, Thomas C G; Chu, Hiutung; Dominguez-Bello, Maria Gloria; Ehrlich, Stanislav Dusko; Elinav, Eran; Geva-Zatorsky, Naama; Gros, Philippe; Guillemin, Karen; Keck, Frédéric; Korem, Tal; McFall-Ngai, Margaret J; Melby, Melissa K; Nichter, Mark; Pettersson, Sven; Poinar, Hendrik; Rees, Tobias; Tropini, Carolina; Zhao, Liping; Giles-Vernick, Tamara
The COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to affect the human microbiome in infected and uninfected individuals, having a substantial impact on human health over the long term. This pandemic intersects with a decades-long decline in microbial diversity and ancestral microbes due to hygiene, antibiotics, and urban living (the hygiene hypothesis). High-risk groups succumbing to COVID-19 include those with preexisting conditions, such as diabetes and obesity, which are also associated with microbiome abnormalities. Current pandemic control measures and practices will have broad, uneven, and potentially long-term effects for the human microbiome across the planet, given the implementation of physical separation, extensive hygiene, travel barriers, and other measures that influence overall microbial loss and inability for reinoculation. Although much remains uncertain or unknown about the virus and its consequences, implementing pandemic control practices could significantly affect the microbiome. In this Perspective, we explore many facets of COVID-19-induced societal changes and their possible effects on the microbiome, and discuss current and future challenges regarding the interplay between this pandemic and the microbiome. Recent recognition of the microbiome's influence on human health makes it critical to consider both how the microbiome, shaped by biosocial processes, affects susceptibility to the coronavirus and, conversely, how COVID-19 disease and prevention measures may affect the microbiome. This knowledge may prove key in prevention and treatment, and long-term biological and social outcomes of this pandemic.
PMID: 33472859
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 4760662

An Antibiotic-Impacted Microbiota Compromises the Development of Colonic Regulatory T Cells and Predisposes to Dysregulated Immune Responses

Zhang, Xiaozhou; Borbet, Timothy C; Fallegger, Angela; Wipperman, Matthew F; Blaser, Martin J; Müller, Anne
Antibiotic exposure early in life and other practices impacting the vertical transmission and ordered assembly of a diverse and balanced gut microbiota are associated with a higher risk of immunological and metabolic disorders such as asthma and allergy, autoimmunity, obesity, and susceptibility to opportunistic infections. In this study, we used a model of perinatal exposure to the broad-spectrum antibiotic ampicillin to examine how the acquisition of a dysbiotic microbiota affects neonatal immune system development. We found that the resultant dysbiosis imprints in a manner that is irreversible after weaning, leading to specific and selective alteration of the colonic CD4+ T-cell compartment. In contrast, colonic granulocyte and myeloid lineages and other mucosal T-cell compartments are unaffected. Among colonic CD4+ T cells, we observed the most pronounced effects on neuropilin-negative, RORγt- and Foxp3-positive regulatory T cells, which are largely absent in antibiotic-exposed mice even as they reach adulthood. Immunomagnetically isolated dendritic cells from antibiotic-exposed mice fail to support the generation of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) from naive T cells ex vivo The perinatally acquired dysbiotic microbiota predisposes to dysregulated effector T-cell responses to Citrobacter rodentium or ovalbumin challenge. The transfer of the antibiotic-impacted, but not healthy, fecal microbiota into germfree recipients recapitulates the selective loss of colonic neuropilin-negative, RORγt- and Foxp3-positive Tregs. The combined data indicate that the early-life acquisition of a dysbiotic microbiota has detrimental effects on the diversity and microbial community composition of offspring that persist into adulthood and predisposes to inappropriate T-cell responses that are linked to compromised immune tolerance.IMPORTANCE The assembly of microbial communities that populate all mucosal surfaces of the human body begins right after birth. This process is prone to disruption as newborns and young infants are increasingly exposed to antibiotics, both deliberately for therapeutic purposes, and as a consequence of transmaternal exposure. We show here using a model of ampicillin administration to lactating dams during their newborn offspring's early life that such exposures have consequences that persist into adulthood. Offspring acquire their mother's antibiotic-impacted microbiota, which compromises their ability to generate a colonic pool of CD4+ T cells, particularly of colonic regulatory T cells. This Treg deficiency cannot be corrected by cohousing with normal mice later and is recapitulated by reconstitution of germfree mice with microbiota harvested from antibiotic-exposed donors. As a consequence of their dysbiosis, and possibly of their Treg deficiency, antibiotic-impacted offspring generate dysregulated Th1 responses to bacterial challenge infection and develop more severe symptoms of ovalbumin-induced anaphylaxis.
PMCID:7858066
PMID: 33531385
ISSN: 2150-7511
CID: 4777112

Accounting for variation in and overuse of antibiotics among humans

Blaser, Martin J; Melby, Melissa K; Lock, Margaret; Nichter, Mark
Worldwide, antibiotic use is increasing, but many infections against which antibiotics are applied are not even caused by bacteria. Over-the-counter and internet sales preclude physician oversight. Regional differences, between and within countries highlight many potential factors influencing antibiotic use. Taking a systems perspective that considers pharmaceutical commodity chains, we examine antibiotic overuse from the vantage point of both sides of the therapeutic relationship. We examine patterns and expectations of practitioners and patients, institutional policies and pressures, the business strategies of pharmaceutical companies and distributors, and cultural drivers of variation. Solutions to improve antibiotic stewardship include practitioners taking greater responsibility for their antibiotic prescribing, increasing the role of caregivers as diagnosticians rather than medicine providers, improving their communication to patients about antibiotic treatment consequences, lessening the economic influences on prescribing, and identifying antibiotic alternatives.
PMID: 33410142
ISSN: 1521-1878
CID: 4747582

A 500-year tale of co-evolution, adaptation, and virulence: Helicobacter pylori in the Americas

Muñoz-Ramirez, Zilia Y; Pascoe, Ben; Mendez-Tenorio, Alfonso; Mourkas, Evangelos; Sandoval-Motta, Santiago; Perez-Perez, Guillermo; Morgan, Douglas R; Dominguez, Ricardo Leonel; Ortiz-Princz, Diana; Cavazza, Maria Eugenia; Rocha, Gifone; Queiroz, Dulcienne M M; Catalano, Mariana; Palma, Gerardo Zerbeto de la; Goldman, Cinthia G; Venegas, Alejandro; Alarcon, Teresa; Oleastro, Monica; Vale, Filipa F; Goodman, Karen J; Torres, Roberto C; Berthenet, Elvire; Hitchings, Matthew D; Blaser, Martin J; Sheppard, Samuel K; Thorell, Kaisa; Torres, Javier
Helicobacter pylori is a common component of the human stomach microbiota, possibly dating back to the speciation of Homo sapiens. A history of pathogen evolution in allopatry has led to the development of genetically distinct H. pylori subpopulations, associated with different human populations, and more recent admixture among H. pylori subpopulations can provide information about human migrations. However, little is known about the degree to which some H. pylori genes are conserved in the face of admixture, potentially indicating host adaptation, or how virulence genes spread among different populations. We analyzed H. pylori genomes from 14 countries in the Americas, strains from the Iberian Peninsula, and public genomes from Europe, Africa, and Asia, to investigate how admixture varies across different regions and gene families. Whole-genome analyses of 723 H. pylori strains from around the world showed evidence of frequent admixture in the American strains with a complex mosaic of contributions from H. pylori populations originating in the Americas as well as other continents. Despite the complex admixture, distinctive genomic fingerprints were identified for each region, revealing novel American H. pylori subpopulations. A pan-genome Fst analysis showed that variation in virulence genes had the strongest fixation in America, compared with non-American populations, and that much of the variation constituted non-synonymous substitutions in functional domains. Network analyses suggest that these virulence genes have followed unique evolutionary paths in the American populations, spreading into different genetic backgrounds, potentially contributing to the high risk of gastric cancer in the region.
PMID: 32879462
ISSN: 1751-7370
CID: 4596122