| Literature DB >> 33907514 |
Yifei Wang1, Jingbin Zheng1, Md Sahidul Islam1, Yang Yang1, Yuanjia Hu1, Xin Chen1.
Abstract
The severe cases of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) frequently exhibit excessive inflammatory responses, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), coagulopathy, and organ damage. The most striking immunopathology of advanced COVID-19 is cytokine release syndrome or "cytokine storm" that is attributable to the deficiencies in immune regulatory mechanisms. CD4+FoxP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) are central regulators of immune responses and play an indispensable role in the maintenance of immune homeostasis. Tregs are likely involved in the attenuation of antiviral defense at the early stage of infection and ameliorating inflammation-induced organ injury at the late stage of COVID-19. In this article, we review and summarize the current understanding of the change of Tregs in patients infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and discuss the potential role of Tregs in the immunopathology of COVID-19. The emerging concept of Treg-targeted therapies, including both adoptive Treg transfer and low dose of IL-2 treatment, is introduced. Furthermore, the potential Treg-boosting effect of therapeutic agents used in the treatment of COVID-19, including dexamethasone, vitamin D, tocilizumab and sarilumab, chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, adalimumab and tetrandrine, is discussed. The problems in the current study of Treg cells in COVID-19 and future perspectives are also addressed. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: CD4+FoxP3+ regulatory T cells; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; immunopathology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33907514 PMCID: PMC8071774 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.59534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Summary of current studies on Treg cells in COVID-19 patients
| Number of patients or healthy donor controls | Source of Tregs | Markers of Tregs | Changes of Tregs | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N=57 (7 mild, 26 severe and 24 recovered cases) | PBMCs | CD25+FoxP3+ | Increase (proportion) in severe cases | |
| N=4 (mechanically ventilated cases) | BALF and PBMC | FoxP3+ | Increase (proportion, both in lungs and blood) | |
| N=39 | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127lo/- | Increase (proportion) | |
| N=169 (80 mild, 22 severe, 61 mild-recovery and 6 severe-recovery cases) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127lo | Increase (number and proportion) | |
| N=1/11 (1 asymptomatic case and 11 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127- | Increase (proportion) | |
| N=12/12 (4 mild, 5 severe, 3 critical cases and 12 heathy controls ) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127- | Increase (proportion, in mild and severe cases) | |
| N=40 (22 Severe, 18 milder disease and 9 ICU cases) | UMAP | FoxP3 | Decrease (proportion) | |
| N=30/8 (30 cases and 8 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD4+FoxP3+CD25+ | Decrease (mRNA level) | |
| N=452 (166 mild or moderate and 286 severe cases) | PBMC | CD3+CD4+CD25+ CD127lo | Decrease (numbers) | |
| N=40 (ICU cases) | PBMC | CD4+FoxP3+CD25+ | Decrease (proportion and mRNA level) | |
| N=19 (Pericardial effusion cases) | PBMC | CD3+CD4+CD25+CD127- | Decrease (proportion) | |
| N=19/18 (19 Children cases and 18 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD3+CD4+CD25+CD127- | Decrease (proportion, in acute phase) | |
| N=109/98 (109 convalescent cases and 98 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD25+CD127-FoxP3+ | Decrease (number) | |
| N=99 (93 moderate, 1 severe and 5 critical cases) | PBMC | CD4+ CD25+FoxP3+ | Decrease (proportion) | |
| N=22/10 (11 covid-19 and 11 no-covid-19 cases with cancer, and 10 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127- | No change (proportion) | |
| N=52 (17 moderate, 27 severe and 8 critical cases) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ | No change (proportion and number) | |
| N=2/2 (A 22-year-old immunocompetent boy, a 63-year-old female COVID cases and 2 healthy controls) | PBMC | CD4+CD25+CD127- FoxP3+ | No change (proportion) |
Figure 1Conceptual model of dual and biphasic roles of Tregs in SARS-CoV-2 infection and immunopathology of COVID-19. In SARS-CoV-2 infection, Tregs are likely to play detrimental and beneficial dual roles and biphasic roles in the early and late stages of the disease. (A) The augmented Treg population in the early stage of infection potently suppresses the mobilization of host defensive immune cells such as Th1 cells and CD8+ CTLs, consequently reducing anti-viral immune responses. (B) An increased number of Tregs could attenuate the inflammatory responses and quench the cytokine storm; this can promote the recovery of patients. (C) In severe COVID-19, depletion of Tregs can enhance the activation of pro-inflammatory immune cells and production of pro-inflammatory cytokines that cause cytokine storm and lead to lung injury, ARDS, and eventually the death of patients.
Comparison of Treg-targeted treatments
| Treatment | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adoptive Transfer of Tregs | Infusion possible to allogeneic patients, off-the-shelf “living drug” | Requires 2-3 weeks for o control for possible phenotypical and functional change after infusion | |
| Low-dose of rIL-2 | Effectively expand of Tregs in autoimmune patients | May activate CD25-expressing proinflammatory T cells |
COVID-19 therapeutic agents and their Treg-boosting effect
| Therapeutic agent | Effect on COVID-19 | Action on Tregs | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dexamethasone | Improves the outcomes of critically ill patients with ARDS (NCT04445506) | Increases in the proportion of Tregs and the ratio of Treg/effector T cells | |
| Vitamin D | Reduces mortality | Induces generation of tolerogenic DCs, IL-10-producing CD4 T cells and antigen-specific Tregs | |
| Tocilizumab and Sarilumab | Reduces the incidence or duration of ICU and reduces length of hospital stay | Increases the proportions of CD4+CD25+CD127lo Tregs and HLA-DR+ activated Tregs | |
| Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine | Possesses antiviral activity, inhibits SARS-CoV-2 infection ( | Promotes the expansion and increases the number of Treg cells | |
| Azithromycin | Further reduces viral load used together with hydroxychloroquine | Promotes Treg phenotype including Foxp3 expression in bulk Tregs | |
| Tetrandrine | Inhibits the entry of SARS-CoV-2 spike-protein pseudovirions ( | Increases the expression of mTNF on APC and induces expansion of Tregs through TNFR2 | |
| Adalimumab | Inhibits the progression of severe COVID-19 | Increases mTNF expression on monocyte and promotes expansion of Tregs through TNFR2 |
Figure 2Comparison of Treg-targeted treatments for COVID-19. Adoptive transfer of ex vivo activated and expanded allogeneic cord-blood derived Tregs and low-dose of recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) enhance Treg activity in severe COVID-19 patients, consequently, dampen the excessive inflammation and quench cytokine storm.