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Severe COVID-19 infection is associated with aberrant cytokine production by infected lung epithelial cells rather than by systemic immune dysfunction

Authors :
Maria Lucia Madariaga
Yihao Lu
Ken Hatogai
Susan Okrah
Kyle R. Cron
Garth W. Strohbehn
Jovian Yu
Jeremy P. Segal
Madan Kumar
SavaÅŸ Tay
Evgeny Izumchenko
Lara Kozloff
Kiang-Teck J. Yeo
Carolina Soto Chervin
Thomas F. Gajewski
Jonathan A. Trujillo
Athalia Rachel Pyzer
Stephen Schrantz
Robin Reschke
Yuanyuan Zha
Blake Flood
Randy F. Sweis
Jessica Fessler
Jeffrey Mueller
Kathleen G. Beavis
Sherin J. Rouhani
Mustafa Fatih Abasiyanik
Lin Chen
Michael Leung
Emily F. Higgs
Jeffrey Bloodworth
Apameh Pezeshk
Alexandra Cabanov
Source :
Research Square, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

The mechanisms explaining progression to severe COVID-19 remain poorly understood. It has been proposed that immune system dysregulation/over-stimulation may be implicated, but it is not clear how such processes would lead to respiratory failure. We performed comprehensive multiparameter immune monitoring in a tightly controlled cohort of 128 COVID-19 patients, and used the ratio of oxygen saturation to fraction of inspired oxygen (SpO2 / FiO2) as a physiologic measure of disease severity. Machine learning algorithms integrating 139 parameters identified IL-6 and CCL2 as two factors predictive of severe disease, consistent with the therapeutic benefit observed with anti-IL6-R antibody treatment. However, transcripts encoding these cytokines were not detected among circulating immune cells. Rather, in situ analysis of lung specimens using RNAscope and immunofluorescent staining revealed that elevated IL-6 and CCL2 were dominantly produced by infected lung type II pneumocytes. Severe disease was not associated with higher viral load, deficient antibody responses, or dysfunctional T cell responses. These results refine our understanding of severe COVID-19 pathophysiology, indicating that aberrant cytokine production by infected lung epithelial cells is a major driver of immunopathology. We propose that these factors cause local immune regulation towards the benefit of the virus.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Research Square, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a98a76b3f4a97f09a58a87ae28237990
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.09.21266492