Filbin Michael R, Mehta Arnav, Schneider Alexis M, Kays Kyle R, Guess Jamey R, Gentili Matteo, Fenyves Bánk G, Charland Nicole C, Gonye Anna L K, Gushterova Irena, Khanna Hargun K, LaSalle Thomas J, Lavin-Parsons Kendall M, Lilly Brendan M, Lodenstein Carl L, Manakongtreecheep Kasidet, Margolin Justin D, McKaig Brenna N, Rojas-Lopez Maricarmen, Russo Brian C, Sharma Nihaarika, Tantivit Jessica, Thomas Molly F, Gerszten Robert E, Heimberg Graham S, Hoover Paul J, Lieb David J, Lin Brian, Ngo Debby, Pelka Karin, Reyes Miguel, Smillie Christopher S, Waghray Avinash, Wood Thomas E, Zajac Amanda S, Jennings Lori L, Grundberg Ida, Bhattacharyya Roby P, Parry Blair Alden, Villani Alexandra-Chloé, Sade-Feldman Moshe, Hacohen Nir, Goldberg Marcia B
bioRxiv. 2020 Nov 4:2020.11.02.365536. doi: 10.1101/2020.11.02.365536.
COVID-19 has caused over 1 million deaths globally, yet the cellular mechanisms underlying severe disease remain poorly understood. By analyzing several thousand plasma proteins in 306 COVID-19 patients and 78 symptomatic controls over serial timepoints using two complementary approaches, we uncover COVID-19 host immune and non-immune proteins not previously linked to this disease. Integration of plasma proteomics with nine published scRNAseq datasets shows that SARS-CoV-2 infection upregulates monocyte/macrophage, plasmablast, and T cell effector proteins. By comparing patients who died to severely ill patients who survived, we identify dynamic immunomodulatory and tissue-associated proteins associated with survival, providing insights into which host responses are beneficial and which are detrimental to survival. We identify intracellular death signatures from specific tissues and cell types, and by associating these with angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) expression, we map tissue damage associated with severe disease and propose which damage results from direct viral infection rather than from indirect effects of illness. We find that disease severity in lung tissue is driven by myeloid cell phenotypes and cell-cell interactions with lung epithelial cells and T cells. Based on these results, we propose a model of immune and epithelial cell interactions that drive cell-type specific and tissue-specific damage in severe COVID-19.
新冠病毒已在全球造成超过100万人死亡,但严重疾病背后的细胞机制仍知之甚少。通过两种互补方法,在连续时间点分析306例新冠病毒患者和78例有症状对照者的数千种血浆蛋白,我们发现了此前未与该疾病相关联的新冠病毒宿主免疫和非免疫蛋白。将血浆蛋白质组学与九个已发表的单细胞RNA测序数据集整合显示,新冠病毒感染会上调单核细胞/巨噬细胞、浆母细胞和T细胞效应蛋白。通过比较死亡患者和存活的重症患者,我们确定了与生存相关的动态免疫调节和组织相关蛋白,从而深入了解哪些宿主反应有益,哪些对生存有害。我们从特定组织和细胞类型中识别出细胞内死亡特征,并将这些特征与血管紧张素转换酶2(ACE2)表达相关联,绘制出与严重疾病相关的组织损伤图,并提出哪些损伤是由直接病毒感染而非疾病的间接影响导致的。我们发现肺组织中的疾病严重程度由髓样细胞表型以及与肺上皮细胞和T细胞的细胞间相互作用驱动。基于这些结果,我们提出了一种免疫和上皮细胞相互作用模型,该模型在严重新冠病毒疾病中驱动细胞类型特异性和组织特异性损伤。