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Chromatin remodeling in peripheral blood cells reflects COVID-19 symptom severity

Authors :
Ephraim L. Tsalik
Hong A. Chung
Micah T. McClain
Shree Bose
Tianyi Chen
Tomer Rotstein
Thomas N. Denny
Thomas W. Burke
Elizabeth Petzold
Grecia rivera Palomino
Nicholas S. Giroux
Bryan Kraft
Xiling Shen
Gregory D. Sempowski
Emily R Ko
Ergang Wang
Bradly P. Nicholson
Shengli Ding
Rui Xi
Ricardo Henao
Christopher W. Woods
Geoffrey S. Ginsburg
Source :
bioRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 infection triggers highly variable host responses and causes varying degrees of illness in humans. We sought to harness the peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) response over the course of illness to provide insight into COVID-19 physiology. We analyzed PBMCs from subjects with variable symptom severity at different stages of clinical illness before and after IgG seroconversion to SARS-CoV-2. Prior to seroconversion, PBMC transcriptomes did not distinguish symptom severity. In contrast, changes in chromatin accessibility were associated with symptom severity. Furthermore, single-cell analyses revealed evolution of the chromatin accessibility landscape and transcription factor motif occupancy for individual PBMC cell types. The most extensive remodeling occurred in CD14+ monocytes where sub-populations with distinct chromatin accessibility profiles were associated with disease severity. Our findings indicate that pre-seroconversion chromatin remodeling in certain innate immune populations is associated with divergence in symptom severity, and the identified transcription factors, regulatory elements, and downstream pathways provide potential prognostic markers for COVID-19 subjects.One sentence summaryChromatin accessibility in immune cells from COVID-19 subjects is remodeled prior to seroconversion to reflect disease severity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4986b856172aca40b81adf3a63b61d58