| Literature DB >> 33299126 |
Abstract
Disorders involving injury to tissue stem cells that ensure normal tissue homeostasis and repair have potential to show unusually devastating clinical consequences. Acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) is one condition where relatively few cytotoxic immune cells target skin stem cells to produce significant morbidity and mortality. By analogy, SARS-CoV-2 is a vector that initially homes to pulmonary stem cells that preferentially express the ACE2 receptor, thus potentially incurring similarly robust pathological consequences. In older individuals, stem cell number and/or function become depleted due to pathways independent of disease-related injury to these subpopulations. Accordingly, pathologic targeting of stem cells in conditions like aGVHD and COVID-19 infection where these cells are already deficient due to the aging process may have dire consequences in elderly individuals. A hypothesis is herein advanced that, as with aGVHD, lung stem cell targeting is a potential co-factor in explaining age-related severity of COVID-19 infection.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33299126 PMCID: PMC7724622 DOI: 10.1038/s41374-020-00520-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lab Invest ISSN: 0023-6837 Impact factor: 5.662
Fig. 1Schematic representation of stem cell targeting in young and old skin and lung in aGVHD and COVID-19, respectively.
In both aGVHD (left) and COVID-19 infection (right), stem cells in affected tissue are targeted and injured, although they are already compromised in skin and lung from older individuals (also see text).