| Literature DB >> 34149697 |
Andrzej Lange1,2, Janusz Lange2, Emilia Jaskuła1,2.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pathomechanism depends on (i) the pathogenicity of the virus, (ii) ability of the immune system to respond to the cytopathic effect of the virus infection, (iii) co-morbidities. Inflammatory cytokine production constitutes a hallmark of COVID-19 that is facilitated by inability of adaptive immunity to control virus invasion. The effect of cytokine release syndrome is deleterious, but the severity of it depends on other confounding factors: age and comorbidities. In this study, we analyze the literature data on the post-transplant course of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplanted (alloHSCT) patients, which is affected by generated inflammatory cytokines. The sequence of events boosting cytokine production was analyzed in relation to clinical and laboratory data highlighting the impact of cytokine generation on the post-transplant course. The collected data were compared to those from studies on COVID-19 patients. The similarities are: (i) the damage/pathogen-associated molecular pattern (DAMP/PAMP) stage is similar except for the initiation hit being sterile in alloHSCT (toxic damage of conditioning regimen) and viral in COVID-19; (ii) genetic host-derived factors play a role; (iii) adaptive immunity fails, DAMP signal(s) increases, over-production of cytokines occurs; (iv) monocytes lacking HLADR expression emerge, being suppressor cells hampering adaptive immunity; (v) immune system homeostasis is broken, the patient's status deteriorates to bed dependency, leading to hypo-oxygenation and malnutrition, which in turn stimulates the intracellular alert pathways with vigorous transcription of cytokine genes. All starts with the interaction between DAMPs with appropriate receptors, which leads to the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, the inflammatory process spreads, tissue is damaged, DAMPs are released and a vicious cycle occurs. Attempts to modify intracellular signaling pathways in patients with post-alloHSCT graft vs host disease have already been undertaken. The similarities documented in this study show that this approach may also be used in COVID-19 patients for tuning signal transduction processes to interrupt the cycle that powers the cytokine overproduction.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 immunology; TCR beta repertoire; alloHSCT immunology; cytokine overproduction; immunogenetic profiling; monocytic-marrow derived suppressor cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149697 PMCID: PMC8206782 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.658896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
The clinical findings and laboratory data registered in patients at risk of cytokine storm after alloHSCT and in those with severe COVID-19.
| alloHSCT | COVID-19 symptomatic cases | |
|---|---|---|
| Proinflammatory environment | Toxicity, engraftment syndrome, GvHD, recurrent infections ( | Cytopathic effect on SARS-CoV-2 infected cells ( |
| CD14+HLADR- | Increased proportion in early post-transplant period affecting the long term survival, and GvHD ( | Increased proportion in severe COVID-19 ( |
| IL-6 | High level in post-transplant period ( | High level in severe COVID-19 ( |
| lymphocytopenia | Frequent at the time of hematologic recovery ( | Present in 80% of cases ( |
| -associated with cytokine fluctuations ( | ||
| -risk factor of aGvHD ( | ||
| Immunogenetic profiling | IFN gamma +874 A (13 CA repeats) allele | |
| Is associated with EBV and CMV ( | Is associated with SARS caused by coronavirus ( | |
| IL-6 -174 G allele | ||
| risk factors for GvHD ( | Postulated to be associated with COVID-19 susceptibility ( | |
| CMV reactivation | Frequent ( | Single case reports and the negative impact of chronic CMV infection is suggested ( |
| EBV reactivation | Frequent ( | Frequent ( |
| Immune dysregulation syndromes | HLH in 4.3% of cases, with 85.5% mortality ( | HLH and TMA are frequent in COVID-19 patients ( |
| TMA in 10 to 20% of cases ( | ||
| Main target organ(s) when cytokine storm develops | Multiorgan involvement as a result of plasma cascade dysregulation, toxic internal organ damage and alloreactivity ( | Acute respiratory distress syndrome ( |
| Plasma cascade dysregulations ( | ||
| Extended symptomatology | Mostly due to alloreactivity and prolonged immunosuppression | “long tail” COVID-19 with multiorgan symptomatology and different mechanisms leading to patients disability ( |
alloHSCT, allogeneic stem cells transplantation; GvHD, Graft versus Host Disease; DLI, Donor Lymphocyte Infusion; HLH, hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis; TMA, thrombotic microangiopathy.
Figure 3A cascade of events after SARS-CoV-2 infection starts with a few days time lag in which the virus replicates using a set of open frame genes in airway epithelial cells (70). Then pneumocytes are invaded and huge amount of DAMPS are released (71). After that innate immunity receptors recognize viral RNA and proinflammatory cytokines are produced using the NFkappaB signaling pathway. Pyroptosis is seen and proinflammatory cytokines build up an inflammatory response (72). Then macrophages, monocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocyte are recruited and activated in the inflammatory environment and the next wave of cytokines surges. In severe COVID-19 cases as a result of emergency myelopoiesis dysfunctional mature neutrophils and HLADRlow monocytes appear in the blood (73). In this complex situation the endothelial cell infection outcome contributes additionally to the inflammatory response. Endothelial damage leading to thrombolytic microangiopathy causes hypoxemia and malnutrition (43). The mTOR pathway is activated, which ends up with NFkappaB and massive cytokine release (74). Created in Biorender.com.
Figure 1Post-alloHSCT chain of events affecting immune system competence. (A) Post-alloHSCT toxicity induces a pro-inflammatory environment with an increase in blood monocytic-marrow derived suppressor cells (CD14+HLADR-) (8), (B) Herpes viruses reactivate (CMV reactivation events in post-transplant period) (28, 29), in the peripheral blood lymphocytes CD8+CD57+ cells increase (110) – T cell repertoire skewed to highly differentiated T cells effective against chronic infection epitopes but neglecting new challenges, (C) TCR gamma/delta cells reprogrammed by CMV reactivation appear frequently in the blood (prevalence of deltaV2 negative cells) (111), immunodominant clones expand (93).
Figure 2The photos illustrate (own documentation): (A) damage of the marrow which induces IL-6 and release of other stress cytokines whose level is modified by SNP polymorphic features (14, 24, 25, 112, 113), (B) skin biopsy with CD8+ cell epithelium colonization in aGvHD case (114), (C) EBV reactivation documented on 104th day after transplant (23), (D) macrophages in a patient with hemophagocytic syndrome, the skin biopsy documenting early endothelial cell damage in the patient developing overt thrombotic microangiopathy at a later time.