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Immune dysregulation and autoreactivity correlate with disease severity in SARS-CoV-2-associated multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children

Authors :
Andrew J. Rice
Alamzeb Khan
Ningshan Li
Charles S. Dela Cruz
Xiting Yan
Kenneth B. Hoehn
Hiromitsu Asashima
Victoria Habet
Tomokazu Sumida
Jason Bishai
Merrick Lopez
Carrie L. Lucas
Jason Catanzaro
Brian Sellers
John S. Tsang
Pamela A. Guerrerio
David van Dijk
Michela Comi
Richard W. Pierce
Anjali Ramaswamy
Harsha K. Chandnani
Zuoheng Wang
Aagam Shah
Avraham Unterman
Yunqing Liu
David A. Hafler
Steven H. Kleinstein
Nina N. Brodsky
William W. Lau
Naftali Kaminski
Neha Bansal
Neal G. Ravindra
Source :
Immunity, medRxiv
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc., 2021.

Abstract

Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a life-threatening post-infectious complication occurring unpredictably weeks after mild or asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection. We profiled MIS-C, adult COVID-19, and healthy pediatric and adult individuals using single-cell RNA sequencing, flow cytometry, antigen receptor repertoire analysis, and unbiased serum proteomics, which collectively identified a signature in MIS-C patients that correlated with disease severity. Despite having no evidence of active infection, MIS-C patients had elevated S100A-family alarmins and decreased antigen presentation signatures, indicative of myeloid dysfunction. MIS-C patients showed elevated expression of cytotoxicity genes in NK and CD8+ T cells and expansion of specific IgG-expressing plasmablasts. Clinically severe MIS-C patients displayed skewed memory T cell TCR repertoires and autoimmunity characterized by endothelium-reactive IgG. The alarmin, cytotoxicity, TCR repertoire, and plasmablast signatures we defined have potential for application in the clinic to better diagnose and potentially predict disease severity early in the course of MIS-C.<br />Graphical abstract<br />Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is a life-threatening and unpredictable condition of unknown etiology. Ramaswamy et al. use peripheral blood single-cell transcriptomic profiling along with other techniques to define key innate and adaptive signatures that characterize MIS-C.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10974180 and 10747613
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Immunity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....123acff32cc33a035980a92d527f44fd