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Untimely TGFβ responses in COVID-19 limit antiviral functions of NK cells

Authors :
Gitta Anne Heinz
Josefine Radke
Sophie Mc Ewen
V. Moos
Jobst Roehmel
Tilmann Kallinich
Pawel Durek
Daniela Niemeyer
Leif G. Hanitsch
Florian Kurth
Thordis Hohnstein
Uwe Kölsch
Mario Witkowski
Philipp Nawrath
Marcus A. Mall
Frederik Heinrich
Leif E. Sander
Stefan Frischbutter
Mir-Farzin Mashreghi
Tom Aschman
Emanuela Marcenaro
Victor M. Corman
Edoardo Viviano
Sascha Treskatsch
Andreas Diefenbach
Marta Ferreira-Gomes
Marcus Maurer
Christian Meisel
Caroline Tizian
Robert Lorenz Chua
Claudia U. Duerr
Stefan Angermair
Andrey Kruglov
Helena Radbruch
Birgit Sawitzki
Silvia Zocche
Christian Conrad
Andreas Radbruch
Irene Mattiola
Joseph A. Trapani
Thomas Schneider
Christian Drosten
Terry Jones
Kristina Allers
Source :
Nature. 600:295-301
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 is a single-stranded RNA virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Given its acute and often self-limiting course, components of the innate immune system are likely central in controlling virus replication thereby determining clinical outcome. Natural killer (NK) cells are innate lymphocytes with notable activity against a broad range of viruses, including RNA viruses1,2. NK cell function may be altered during COVID-19 despite increased representation of NK cells with an activated and ‘adaptive’ phenotype3,4. Here we show that viral load decline in COVID-19 correlates with NK cell status and that NK cells can control SARS-CoV-2 replication by recognizing infected target cells. In severe COVID-19, NK cells show remarkable defects in virus control, cytokine production and cell-mediated cytotoxicity despite high expression of cytotoxic effector molecules. Single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) of NK cells along the time course of the entire COVID-19 disease spectrum reveals a unique gene expression signature. Transcriptional networks of interferon-driven NK cell activation are superimposed by a dominant TGFβ response signature with reduced expression of genes related to cell-cell adhesion, granule exocytosis and cell-mediated cytotoxicity. In severe COVID-19, serum levels of TGFβ peak during the first 2 weeks of infection, and serum obtained from these patients profoundly inhibits NK cell function in a TGFβ-dependent manner. Our data reveal that untimely production of TGFβ is a hallmark of severe COVID-19 and may inhibit NK cell function and early virus control.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
600
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e8ef4688f094e8d16773050add62ca69