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Benjamin Parks

Stanford University

ORCID: 0000-0002-0261-7472

Publishes on Single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics, Immune Cell Function and Interaction. 13 papers and 1.1k citations.

13Publications
1.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Multi-omic profiling reveals widespread dysregulation of innate immunity and hematopoiesis in COVID-19
Aaron J. Wilk, Madeline J. Lee, Bei Wei et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|2021
Cited by 228Open Access

Our understanding of protective versus pathological immune responses to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), is limited by inadequate profiling of patients at the extremes of the disease severity spectrum. Here, we performed multi-omic single-cell immune profiling of 64 COVID-19 patients across the full range of disease severity, from outpatients with mild disease to fatal cases. Our transcriptomic, epigenomic, and proteomic analyses revealed widespread dysfunction of peripheral innate immunity in severe and fatal COVID-19, including prominent hyperactivation signatures in neutrophils and NK cells. We also identified chromatin accessibility changes at NF-κB binding sites within cytokine gene loci as a potential mechanism for the striking lack of pro-inflammatory cytokine production observed in monocytes in severe and fatal COVID-19. We further demonstrated that emergency myelopoiesis is a prominent feature of fatal COVID-19. Collectively, our results reveal disease severity-associated immune phenotypes in COVID-19 and identify pathogenesis-associated pathways that are potential targets for therapeutic intervention.

Multi-omic profiling reveals widespread dysregulation of innate immunity and hematopoiesis in COVID-19
Aaron J. Wilk, Madeline J. Lee, Bei Wei et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2020
Cited by 53Open Access

ABSTRACT Our understanding of protective vs. pathologic immune responses to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), is limited by inadequate profiling of patients at the extremes of the disease severity spectrum. Here, we performed multi-omic single-cell immune profiling of 64 COVID-19 patients across the full range of disease severity, from outpatients with mild disease to fatal cases. Our transcriptomic, epigenomic, and proteomic analyses reveal widespread dysfunction of peripheral innate immunity in severe and fatal COVID-19, with the most profound disturbances including a prominent neutrophil hyperactivation signature and monocytes with anti-inflammatory features. We further demonstrate that emergency myelopoiesis is a prominent feature of fatal COVID-19. Collectively, our results reveal disease severity-associated immune phenotypes in COVID-19 and identify pathogenesis-associated pathways that are potential targets for therapeutic intervention. One Sentence Summary Single-cell profiling demonstrates multifarious dysregulation of innate immune phenotype associated with COVID-19 severity.