Back to Search Start Over

The dichotomous and incomplete adaptive immunity in COVID-19

Authors :
Sen Yang
Jing Zhou
Qizhao Huang
Guozhong Zhang
Pinghuang Liu
Lilin Ye
Yaokai Chen
Jing Zhao
Li Hu
Leiqiong Gao
Jianfang Tang
Zhiwei Pan
Zhirong Li
Ren Li
Yang Yang
Xiangyu Chen
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SummaryThe adaptive immunity that protects patients from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), is not well characterized. In particular, the asymptomatic patients have been found to induce weak and transient SARS-CoV-2 antibody responses, but the underlying mechanisms remain unknown; meanwhile, the protective immunity that guide the recovery of these asymptomatic patients is also not well studied. Here, we characterized SARS-CoV-2-specific B-cell and T-cell responses in 10 asymptomatic patients and 49 patients with other disease severity (mild, n = 10, moderate, n = 32, severe, n = 7) and found that asymptomatic or mild symptomatic patients failed to mount virus-specific germinal center (GC) B cell responses that result in robust and long-term humoral immunity, assessed by GC response indicators including follicular helper T (TFH) cell and memory B cell responses as well as serum CXCL13 levels. Alternatively, these patients mounted potent virus-specific TH1 and CD8+ T cell responses. In sharp contrast, patients of moderate or severe disease induced vigorous virus-specific GC B cell responses and associated TFH responses; however, the virus-specific TH1 and CD8+ T cells were minimally induced in these patients. These results therefore uncovered the protective immunity in COVID-19 patients and revealed the strikingly dichotomous and incomplete adaptive immunity in COVID-19 patients with different disease severity, providing important insights into rational design of COVID-19 vaccines.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........56e0a5c55b7f9e6bcc6597dff64e5ffb