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Profound dysregulation of T cell homeostasis and function in patients with severe COVID‐19
- Source :
- Adamo, Sarah; Chevrier, Stéphane; Cervia, Carlo; Zurbuchen, Yves; Raeber, Miro E; Yang, Liliane; Sivapatham, Sujana; Jacobs, Andrea; Baechli, Esther; Rudiger, Alain; Stüssi‐Helbling, Melina; Huber, Lars C; Schaer, Dominik J; Bodenmiller, Bernd; Boyman, Onur; Nilsson, Jakob (2021). Profound dysregulation of T cell homeostasis and function in patients with severe COVID‐19. Allergy, 76(9):2866-2881.
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Background: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is caused by infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and shows a broad clinical presentation ranging from asymptomatic infection to fatal disease. A very prominent feature associated with severe COVID-19 is T cell lymphopenia. However, homeostatic and functional properties of T cells are ill-defined in COVID-19. Methods: We prospectively enrolled individuals with mild and severe COVID-19 into our multicenter cohort and performed a cross-sectional analysis of phenotypic and functional characteristics of T cells using 40-parameter mass cytometry, flow cytometry, targeted proteomics, and functional assays. Results: Compared with mild disease, we observed strong perturbations of peripheral T cell homeostasis and function in severe COVID-19. Individuals with severe COVID-19 showed T cell lymphopenia and redistribution of T cell populations, including loss of naïve T cells, skewing toward CD4+ T follicular helper cells and cytotoxic CD4+ T cells, and expansion of activated and exhausted T cells. Extensive T cell apoptosis was particularly evident with severe disease and T cell lymphopenia, which in turn was accompanied by impaired T cell responses to several common viral antigens. Patients with severe disease showed elevated interleukin-7 and increased T cell proliferation. Furthermore, patients sampled at late time points after symptom onset had higher T cell counts and improved antiviral T cell responses. Conclusion: Our study suggests that severe COVID-19 is characterized by extensive T cell dysfunction and T cell apoptosis, which is associated with signs of homeostatic T cell proliferation and T cell recovery. Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; T cells; lymphopenia.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Adamo, Sarah; Chevrier, Stéphane; Cervia, Carlo; Zurbuchen, Yves; Raeber, Miro E; Yang, Liliane; Sivapatham, Sujana; Jacobs, Andrea; Baechli, Esther; Rudiger, Alain; Stüssi‐Helbling, Melina; Huber, Lars C; Schaer, Dominik J; Bodenmiller, Bernd; Boyman, Onur; Nilsson, Jakob (2021). Profound dysregulation of T cell homeostasis and function in patients with severe COVID‐19. Allergy, 76(9):2866-2881.
- Notes :
- application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-204824, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1443038854
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource