ACE-2-like enzymatic activity in COVID-19 convalescents with persistent pulmonary symptoms associated with immunoglobulin
Yufeng Song, Frances Mehl, Lyndsey M. Muehling, Glenda Canderan, Kyle Enfield, Jie Sun, Michael T. Yin, Sarah J. Ratcliffe, Jeffrey M. Wilson, Alexandra Kadl, Judith A. Woodfolk, Steven L. Zeichner

TL;DR
Some people recovering from COVID-19 produce antibodies that mimic ACE2 enzyme activity, which may contribute to long-term symptoms like blood pressure issues.
Contribution
Identified ACE2-like enzymatic activity in convalescent patients, linking it to persistent symptoms in long COVID.
Findings
ACE2-like abzymes are present in convalescent patients with persistent pulmonary symptoms.
ACE2-like activity correlates with blood pressure changes during exercise tests.
These abzymes may play a role in the pathogenesis of long COVID.
Abstract
Many difficult-to-understand clinical features characterize COVID-19 and post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC or long COVID [LC]). These can include blood pressure instability, hyperinflammation, coagulopathies, and neuropsychiatric complaints. The pathogenesis of these features remains unclear. The SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein receptor-binding domain (RBD) binds angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) on the surface of host cells to initiate infection. We hypothesized that some people convalescing from COVID-19 may produce anti-RBD antibodies that resemble ACE2 sufficiently to have ACE2-like catalytic activity, that is, they are ACE2-like proteolytic abzymes that may help mediate the pathogenesis of COVID-19 and LC. In previous work, we showed that some people with acute COVID-19 had immunoglobulin-associated ACE2-like proteolytic activity, suggesting that some people with COVID-19 indeed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
