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The cellular immune response to COVID-19 deciphered by single cell multi-omics across three UK centres

Authors :
Josephine Barnes
Aidan T Hanrath
Louis C.S. Gardner
Stijn van Dongen
Anthony J. Rostron
Rik G.H. Lindeboom
Michael D Morgan
Justin Engelbert
Kenneth G. C. Smith
John C. Marioni
Berthold Göttgens
Caroline Wilson
Marko Z Nikolic
Andrew Barr
Zewen K. Tuong
Laura Jardine
Kerstin B Meyer
Eliz Kilich
Paul A Lyons
Elisa Laurenti
Ni Huang
Laura Bergamaschi
Simone Webb
Amada Sanchez-Gonzalez
Jaume Bacardit
Sophie Hambleton
Nusayhah Gopee
Gary Reynolds
Dave Horsfall
Jonathan M. Scott
Aarash Saleh
Nicole Mende
Hamish W King
Karsten Bach
Natsuhiko Kumasaka
Fernando J Calero-Nieto
Vladimir Yu. Kiselev
Sarah A. Teichmann
Sam M. Janes
Rebecca Payne
Kaylee B Worlock
Michael W. Mather
Bayanne Olabi
Muzlifah Haniffa
Rachel A. Botting
A. John Simpson
A Saigal
Angus de Wilton
Menna R. Clatworthy
Katarzyna D. Kania
Paul Coupland
Nicola K. Wilson
Masahiro Yoshida
Chris Duncan
Federica Mescia
Emily Stephenson
Jarmila Stremenova Spegarova
Emma Dann
Ina Schim van der Loeff
Kenneth F Baker
Waradon Sungnak
Elena Prigmore
Jim McGrath
Krzysztof Polanski
Issac Goh
Florian Gothe
Claire Smith
Jonathan Coxhead
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic, caused by SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has resulted in excess morbidity and mortality as well as economic decline. To characterise the systemic host immune response to SARS-CoV-2, we performed single-cell RNA-sequencing coupled with analysis of cell surface proteins, providing molecular profiling of over 800,000 peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a cohort of 130 patients with COVID-19. Our cohort, from three UK centres, spans the spectrum of clinical presentations and disease severities ranging from asymptomatic to critical. Three control groups were included: healthy volunteers, patients suffering from a non-COVID-19 severe respiratory illness and healthy individuals administered with intravenous lipopolysaccharide to model an acute inflammatory response. Full single cell transcriptomes coupled with quantification of 188 cell surface proteins, and T and B lymphocyte antigen receptor repertoires have provided several insights into COVID-19: 1. a new non-classical monocyte state that sequesters platelets and replenishes the alveolar macrophage pool; 2. platelet activation accompanied by early priming towards megakaryopoiesis in immature haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells and expansion of megakaryocyte-primed progenitors; 3. increased clonally expanded CD8+ effector:effector memory T cells, and proliferating CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in patients with more severe disease; and 4. relative increase of IgA plasmablasts in asymptomatic stages that switches to expansion of IgG plasmablasts and plasma cells, accompanied with higher incidence of BCR sharing, as disease severity increases. All data and analysis results are available for interrogation and data mining through an intuitive web portal. Together, these data detail the cellular processes present in peripheral blood during an acute immune response to COVID-19, and serve as a template for multi-omic single cell data integration across multiple centers to rapidly build powerful resources to help combat diseases such as COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4c0b1b468522c0c5b65d5a12538cce0c