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A molecular single-cell lung atlas of lethal COVID-19

Authors :
Jay H. Lefkowitch
Samuel F. Bakhoum
George A. Alba
Denis Schapiro
Yaron Bram
Patricia Ho
Ajay Nair
Anjali Saqi
Yiping Wang
Robert E. Schwartz
Daniel T. Montoro
Armando Del Portillo
Jianwen Que
Alain C. Borczuk
Robert F. Schwabe
Sean W. Chen
André F. Rendeiro
Johannes C. Melms
Somnath Tagore
Hanina Hibshoosh
Adrienne M. Luoma
Adam E. Kornberg
Amit Dipak Amin
Mariano G. Clausi
Niroshana Anandasabapathy
Chris J. Frangieh
Stephen M. Lagana
Olivier Elemento
Yinshan Fang
Huachao Huang
Igor Katsyv
Mayte Suárez-Fariñas
Xinzheng V. Guo
Benjamin Izar
Emily J. Tsai
Charles C. Marboe
Mathieu F. Bakhoum
Aveline Filliol
Glen S. Markowitz
Hiranmayi Ravichandran
Arnold Han
Emmanuel Zorn
Meri Rogava
Jana Biermann
Source :
Nature. 595:114-119
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Respiratory failure is the leading cause of death in patients with severe SARS-CoV-2 infection1,2, but the host response at the lung tissue level is poorly understood. Here we performed single-nucleus RNA sequencing of about 116,000 nuclei from the lungs of nineteen individuals who died of COVID-19 and underwent rapid autopsy and seven control individuals. Integrated analyses identified substantial alterations in cellular composition, transcriptional cell states, and cell-to-cell interactions, thereby providing insight into the biology of lethal COVID-19. The lungs from individuals with COVID-19 were highly inflamed, with dense infiltration of aberrantly activated monocyte-derived macrophages and alveolar macrophages, but had impaired T cell responses. Monocyte/macrophage-derived interleukin-1β and epithelial cell-derived interleukin-6 were unique features of SARS-CoV-2 infection compared to other viral and bacterial causes of pneumonia. Alveolar type 2 cells adopted an inflammation-associated transient progenitor cell state and failed to undergo full transition into alveolar type 1 cells, resulting in impaired lung regeneration. Furthermore, we identified expansion of recently described CTHRC1+ pathological fibroblasts3 contributing to rapidly ensuing pulmonary fibrosis in COVID-19. Inference of protein activity and ligand–receptor interactions identified putative drug targets to disrupt deleterious circuits. This atlas enables the dissection of lethal COVID-19, may inform our understanding of long-term complications of COVID-19 survivors, and provides an important resource for therapeutic development. Lung samples collected soon after death from COVID-19 are used to provide a single-cell atlas of SARS-CoV-2 infection and the ensuing molecular changes.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
595
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cefac8d5d3925263c7f2ffbb4292f5c1