Systems-level immunomonitoring from acute to recovery phase of severe COVID-19

Lucie Rodriguez(Science for Life Laboratory), Pirkka T. Pekkarinen(University of Helsinki), Tadepally Lakshmikanth(Science for Life Laboratory), Ziyang Tan(Science for Life Laboratory), Camila Rosat Consiglio(Science for Life Laboratory), Christian Pou(Science for Life Laboratory), Yang Chen(Science for Life Laboratory), Constantin Habimana Mugabo(Science for Life Laboratory), Anh Quoc Nguyen(University of Helsinki), Kirsten Nowlan(University of Helsinki), Tomas Strandin(University of Helsinki), Lev Levanov(University of Helsinki), Jaromír Mikeš(Science for Life Laboratory), Jun Wang(Science for Life Laboratory), Anu Kantele(University of Helsinki), Jussi Hepojoki(University of Helsinki), Olli Vapalahti(University of Helsinki), Santtu Heinonen(University of Helsinki), Eliisa Kekäläinen(University of Helsinki), Petter Brodin(Karolinska University Hospital)
medRxiv
June 5, 2020
Cited by 52Open Access
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Abstract

SUMMARY The immune response to SARS-CoV2 is under intense investigation, but not fully understood att this moment. Severe disease is characterized by vigorous inflammatory responses in the lung, often with a sudden onset after 5–7 days of stable disease. Efforts to modulate this hyperinflammation and the associated acute respiratory distress syndrome, rely on the unraveling of the immune cell interactions and cytokines that drive such responses. Systems-level analyses are required to simultaneously capture all immune cell populations and the many protein mediators by which cells communicate. Since every patient analyzed will be captured at different stages of his or her infection, longitudinal monitoring of the immune response is critical. Here we report on a systems-level blood immunomonitoring study of 39 adult patients, hospitalized with severe COVID-19 and followed with up to 14 blood samples from acute to recovery phases of the disease. We describe an IFNγ – Eosinophil axis activated prior to lung hyperinflammation and changes in cell-cell coregulation during different stages of the disease. We also map an immune trajectory during recovery that is shared among patients with severe COVID-19. HIGHLIGHTS Systems-level immunomonitoring from acute to recovery in severe COVID-19 An IFNγ - Eosinophil axis involved in lung hyperinflammation Cell-cell coregulation differ during four disease stages Basophils and hyperinflammation modulate humoral responses A shared trajectory of immunological recovery in severe COVID-19


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