Immune profiling of COVID-19 patients has identified numerous alterations in both innate and adaptive immunity. However, whether those changes are specific to SARS-CoV-2 or driven by a general inflammatory response shared across severely ill pneumonia patients remains unknown. Here, we compared the immune profile of severe COVID-19 with non-SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia ICU patients using longitudinal, high-dimensional single-cell spectral cytometry and algorithm-guided analysis. COVID-19 and non-SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia both showed increased emergency myelopoiesis and displayed features of adaptive immune paralysis. However, pathological immune signatures suggestive of T cell exhaustion were exclusive to COVID-19. The integration of single-cell profiling with a predicted binding capacity of SARS-CoV-2 peptides to the patients’ HLA profile further linked the COVID-19 immunopathology to impaired virus recognition. Toward clinical translation, circulating NKT cell frequency was identified as a predictive biomarker for patient outcome. Our comparative immune map serves to delineate treatment strategies to interfere with the immunopathologic cascade exclusive to severe COVID-19.Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About The Expert
Stefanie Kreutmair
Susanne Unger
Nicolás Gonzalo Núñez
Florian Ingelfinger
Chiara Alberti
Donatella De Feo
Sinduya Krishnarajah
Manuel Kauffmann
Ekaterina Friebel
Sepideh Babaei
Benjamin Gaborit
Mirjam Lutz
Nicole Puertas Jurado
Nisar P Malek
Siri Goepel
Peter Rosenberger
Helene A Häberle
Ikram Ayoub
Sally Al-Hajj
Jakob Nilsson
Manfred Claassen
Roland Liblau
Guillaume Martin-Blondel
Michael Bitzer
Antoine Roquilly
Burkhard Becher
References
PubMed