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Longitudinal immune profiling reveals key myeloid signatures associated with COVID-19

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posted on 2020-12-11, 10:02 authored by ER Mann, M Menon, SB Knight, JE Konkel, C Jagger, TN Shaw, S Krishnan, M Rattray, A Ustianowski, ND Bakerly, P Dark, GM Lord, A Simpson, T Felton, LP Ho, M Feldmann, JR Grainger, T Hussell, A Horsley, T Harrison, J Porter, R Djukanovic, S Marciniak, C Brightling, L McGarvey, J Davies, R Ahmed, HA Shuwa, M Avery, K Birchall, O Brand, E Charsley, A Chenery, C Chew, R Clark, E Connolly, K Connolly, S Dawson, L Durrans, H Durrington, J Egan, C Fox, H Francis, M Franklin, S Glasgow, N Godfrey, KJ Gray, S Grundy, J Guerin, P Hackney, M Iqbal, C Hayes, E Hardy, J Harris, A John, B Jolly, V Kästele, S Khan, G Lindergard, S Lui, L Lowe, AG Mathioudakis, FA McClure, J Mitchell, C Moizer, K Moore, DJ Morgan, S Moss, SM Baker, R Oliver, G Padden, C Parkinson, L Pearmain, M Phuycharoen, A Saha, B Salcman, NA Scott, S Sharma, J Shaw, E Shepley, L Smith, S Stephan, R Stephens, G Tavernier, R Tudge, A Uriel, L Wareing, R Warren, T Williams, L Willmore, M Younas
COVID-19 pathogenesis is associated with an exaggerated immune response. However, the specific cellular mediators and inflammatory components driving diverse clinical disease outcomes remain poorly understood. We undertook longitudinal immune profiling on both whole blood and peripheral blood mononuclear cells of hospitalized patients during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. Here, we report key immune signatures present shortly after hospital admission that were associated with the severity of COVID-19. Immune signatures were related to shifts in neutrophil to T cell ratio, elevated serum IL-6, MCP-1, and IP-10 and modulation of CD14+ monocyte phenotype and function. Modified features of CD14+ monocytes included poor induction of the prostaglandin-producing enzyme, COX-2, and enhanced expression of the cell cycle marker Ki-67. Longitudinal analysis revealed reversion of some immune features back to the healthy median level in patients with a good eventual outcome. These findings identify previously unappreciated alterations in the innate immune compartment of patients with COVID-19 and lend support to the idea that therapeutic strategies targeting release of myeloid cells from bone marrow should be considered in this disease. Moreover, they demonstrate that features of an exaggerated immune response are present early after hospital admission, suggesting that immunomodulating therapies would be most beneficial at early time points.

History

Citation

Science Immunology 17 Sep 2020: Vol. 5, Issue 51, eabd6197 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abd6197

Author affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Science Immunology

Volume

5

Issue

51

Pagination

eabd6197

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

issn

2470-9468

eissn

2470-9468

Acceptance date

2020-09-14

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-09-17

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng