Dysregulated Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses Discriminate Disease Severity in COVID-19

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Abstract

The clinical spectrum of COVID-19 varies and the differences in host response characterizing this variation have not been fully elucidated. COVID-19 disease severity correlates with an excessive proinflammatory immune response and profound lymphopenia. Inflammatory responses according to disease severity were explored by plasma cytokine measurements and proteomics analysis in 147 COVID-19 patients. Furthermore, peripheral blood mononuclear cell cytokine production assays and whole blood flow cytometry were performed. Results confirm a hyperinflammatory innate immune state, while highlighting hepatocyte growth factor and stem cell factor as potential biomarkers for disease severity. Clustering analysis revealed no specific inflammatory endotypes in COVID-19 patients. Functional assays revealed abrogated adaptive cytokine production (interferon-γ, interleukin-17, and interleukin-22) and prominent T-cell exhaustion in critically ill patients, whereas innate immune responses were intact or hyperresponsive. Collectively, this extensive analysis provides a comprehensive insight into the pathobiology of severe to critical COVID-19 and highlights potential biomarkers of disease severity.

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Janssen, N. A. F., Grondman, I., De Nooijer, A. H., Boahen, C. K., Koeken, V. A. C. M., Matzaraki, V., … Van De Veerdonk, F. L. (2021). Dysregulated Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses Discriminate Disease Severity in COVID-19. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 223(8), 1322–1333. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiab065

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