| Literature DB >> 35177862 |
Keith Sacco1, Riccardo Castagnoli1,2, Svetlana Vakkilainen1, Can Liu3,4, Ottavia M Delmonte1, Cihan Oguz5,6, Ian M Kaplan7, Sara Alehashemi1, Peter D Burbelo8, Farzana Bhuyan1, Adriana A de Jesus1, Kerry Dobbs1, Lindsey B Rosen1, Aristine Cheng1, Elana Shaw1, Mikko S Vakkilainen9, Francesca Pala1, Justin Lack3,5, Yu Zhang1, Danielle L Fink10, Vasileios Oikonomou1, Andrew L Snow11, Clifton L Dalgard12,13, Jinguo Chen14, Brian A Sellers14, Gina A Montealegre Sanchez15, Karyl Barron16, Emma Rey-Jurado17, Cecilia Vial17, Maria Cecilia Poli17,18, Amelia Licari2, Daniela Montagna2,19, Gian Luigi Marseglia2, Francesco Licciardi20, Ugo Ramenghi20, Valentina Discepolo21, Andrea Lo Vecchio21, Alfredo Guarino21, Eli M Eisenstein22, Luisa Imberti23, Alessandra Sottini23, Andrea Biondi24, Sayonara Mató25, Dana Gerstbacher26, Meng Truong1, Michael A Stack1, Mary Magliocco27, Marita Bosticardo1, Tomoki Kawai1, Jeffrey J Danielson1, Tyler Hulett28, Manor Askenazi28, Shaohui Hu28, Jeffrey I Cohen29, Helen C Su1, Douglas B Kuhns10, Michail S Lionakis1, Thomas M Snyder7, Steven M Holland1, Raphaela Goldbach-Mansky1, John S Tsang3,30, Luigi D Notarangelo31.
Abstract
Pediatric Coronavirus Disease 2019 (pCOVID-19) is rarely severe; however, a minority of children infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) might develop multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), with substantial morbidity. In this longitudinal multi-institutional study, we applied multi-omics (analysis of soluble biomarkers, proteomics, single-cell gene expression and immune repertoire analysis) to profile children with COVID-19 (n = 110) and MIS-C (n = 76), along with pediatric healthy controls (pHCs; n = 76). pCOVID-19 was characterized by robust type I interferon (IFN) responses, whereas prominent type II IFN-dependent and NF-κB-dependent signatures, matrisome activation and increased levels of circulating spike protein were detected in MIS-C, with no correlation with SARS-CoV-2 PCR status around the time of admission. Transient expansion of TRBV11-2 T cell clonotypes in MIS-C was associated with signatures of inflammation and T cell activation. The association of MIS-C with the combination of HLA A*02, B*35 and C*04 alleles suggests genetic susceptibility. MIS-C B cells showed higher mutation load than pCOVID-19 and pHC. These results identify distinct immunopathological signatures in pCOVID-19 and MIS-C that might help better define the pathophysiology of these disorders and guide therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35177862 PMCID: PMC9119950 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-022-01724-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 87.241