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Bracing NK cell based therapy to relegate pulmonary inflammation in COVID-19

Authors :
Sachin Kumar Singh
Kavindra Kumar Kesari
Talagavadi Channaiah Anudeep
Saurabh Kumar Jha
Madhan Jeyaraman
Sunny Dholpuria
Dinesh Kumar Chellappan
Niraj Kumar Jha
Rashmi Jain
Sushmitha Es
Harish Dureja
Dhruv Kumar
Gaurav Gupta
Shreesh Ojha
Kamal Dua
Asawari Bapat
Arun Gulati
Shirodkar Jaswandi Dilip
Sathish Muthu
Sharda University
Government Medical College and Hospital
Infohealth FZE
Raja Rajeswari Medical College & Hospital
Kalpana Chawla Government Medical College
BYL Nair Charitable Hospital & TN Medical College
ESIS Hospital
Amity University
Department of Applied Physics
United Arab Emirates University
Indian Scientific Education and Technology Foundation
Suresh Gyan Vihar University
Maharshi Dayanand University
International Medical University
Lovely Professional University
Aalto-yliopisto
Aalto University
Source :
Heliyon, Heliyon, Vol 7, Iss 7, Pp e07635-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

The contagiosity of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has startled mankind and has brought our lives to a standstill. The treatment focused mainly on repurposed immunomodulatory and antiviral agents along with the availability of a few vaccines for prophylaxis to vanquish COVID-19. This seemingly mandates a deeper understanding of the disease pathogenesis. This necessitates a plausible extrapolation of cell-based therapy to COVID-19 and is regarded equivalently significant. Recently, correlative pieces of clinical evidence reported a robust decline in lymphocyte count in severe COVID-19 patients that suggest dysregulated immune responses as a key element contributing to the pathophysiological alterations. The large granular lymphocytes also known as natural killer (NK) cells play a heterogeneous role in biological functioning wherein their frontline action defends the body against a wide array of infections and tumors. They prominently play a critical role in viral clearance and executing immuno-modulatory activities. Accumulated clinical evidence demonstrate a decrease in the number of NK cells in circulation with or without phenotypical exhaustion. These plausibly contribute to the progression of pulmonary inflammation in COVID-19 pneumonia and result in acute lung injury. In this review, we have outlined the present understanding of the immunological response of NK cells in COVID-19 infection. We have also discussed the possible use of these powerful biological cells as a therapeutic agent in view of preventing immunological harms of SARS-CoV-2 and the current challenges in advocating NK cell therapy for the same.<br />SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; Natural killer cells; Cytokines; Pulmonary inflammation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24058440
Volume :
7
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heliyon
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d271665af0a374a769177b2eda43c12