| Literature DB >> 33674591 |
Pierre Bost1,2,3, Francesco De Sanctis4, Stefania Canè4, Stefano Ugel4, Katia Donadello5, Monica Castellucci6, David Eyal1, Alessandra Fiore4, Cristina Anselmi4, Roza Maria Barouni4, Rosalinda Trovato4, Simone Caligola4, Alessia Lamolinara7, Manuela Iezzi7, Federica Facciotti8, Annarita Mazzariol9, Davide Gibellini9, Pasquale De Nardo10, Evelina Tacconelli10, Leonardo Gottin5, Enrico Polati5, Benno Schwikowski2, Ido Amit11, Vincenzo Bronte12.
Abstract
Since the beginning of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, COVID-19 appeared as a unique disease with unconventional tissue and systemic immune features. Here we show a COVID-19 immune signature associated with severity by integrating single-cell RNA-seq analysis from blood samples and broncho-alveolar lavage fluids with clinical, immunological and functional ex vivo data. This signature is characterized by lung accumulation of naïve lymphoid cells associated with a systemic expansion and activation of myeloid cells. Myeloid-driven immune suppression is a hallmark of COVID-19 evolution, highlighting arginase-1 expression with immune regulatory features of monocytes. Monocyte-dependent and neutrophil-dependent immune suppression loss is associated with fatal clinical outcome in severe patients. Additionally, our analysis shows a lung CXCR6+ effector memory T cell subset is associated with better prognosis in patients with severe COVID-19. In summary, COVID-19-induced myeloid dysregulation and lymphoid impairment establish a condition of 'immune silence' in patients with critical COVID-19.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33674591 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21702-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919