Program in Health Sciences & Technology, Harvard Medical School & MIT, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Jun 4;12(6):e0351623. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.03516-23. Epub 2024 Apr 30.
Recent case reports and epidemiological data suggest that fungal infections represent an underappreciated complication among people with severe COVID-19. However, the frequency of fungal colonization in patients with COVID-19 and associations with specific immune responses in the airways remain incompletely defined. We previously generated a single-cell RNA-sequencing data set characterizing the upper respiratory microenvironment during COVID-19 and mapped the relationship between disease severity and the local behavior of nasal epithelial cells and infiltrating immune cells. Our previous study, in agreement with findings from related human cohorts, demonstrated that a profound deficiency in host immunity, particularly in type I and type III interferon signaling in the upper respiratory tract, is associated with rapid progression to severe disease and worse clinical outcomes. We have now performed further analysis of this cohort and identified a subset of participants with severe COVID-19 and concurrent detection of species-derived transcripts within samples collected from the nasopharynx and trachea. Here, we present the clinical characteristics of these individuals. Using matched single-cell transcriptomic profiles of these individuals' respiratory mucosa, we identify epithelial immune signatures suggestive of IL17 stimulation and anti-fungal immunity. Further, we observe a significant expression of anti-fungal inflammatory cascades in the nasal and tracheal epithelium of all participants who went on to develop severe COVID-19, even among participants without detectable genetic material from fungal pathogens. Together, our data suggest that IL17 stimulation-in part driven by colonization-and blunted interferon signaling represent a common feature of severe COVID-19 infection.
In this paper, we present an analysis suggesting that symptomatic and asymptomatic fungal coinfections can impact patient disease progression during COVID-19 hospitalization. By looking into the presence of other pathogens and their effect on the host immune response during COVID-19 hospitalizations, we aim to offer insight into an underestimated scenario, furthering our current knowledge of determinants of severity that could be considered for future diagnostic and intervention strategies.
最近的病例报告和流行病学数据表明,真菌感染是 COVID-19 重症患者中一种未被充分认识的并发症。然而,COVID-19 患者的真菌感染定植频率及其与气道特定免疫反应的关系仍不完全明确。我们之前生成了一个单细胞 RNA 测序数据集,用于描述 COVID-19 期间上呼吸道的微环境,并绘制了疾病严重程度与鼻上皮细胞和浸润免疫细胞局部行为之间的关系。我们之前的研究与相关的人类队列研究结果一致,表明宿主免疫的严重缺陷,特别是在上呼吸道中 I 型和 III 型干扰素信号,与迅速发展为重症疾病和更差的临床结局相关。我们现在对该队列进行了进一步分析,并在从鼻咽和气管采集的样本中同时检测到 种衍生的转录本的情况下,确定了一组患有严重 COVID-19 的参与者。在这里,我们介绍这些个体的临床特征。使用这些个体呼吸道粘膜的匹配单细胞转录组谱,我们确定了上皮免疫特征,提示 IL17 刺激和抗真菌免疫。此外,我们观察到所有发展为严重 COVID-19 的参与者的鼻和气管上皮中抗真菌炎症级联的显著表达,甚至在没有检测到真菌病原体遗传物质的参与者中也是如此。总之,我们的数据表明,IL17 刺激——部分由 定植驱动——和干扰素信号转导迟钝是严重 COVID-19 感染的共同特征。
在本文中,我们提出了一项分析结果,表明有症状和无症状的真菌感染合并感染会影响 COVID-19 住院期间患者的疾病进展。通过研究 COVID-19 住院期间其他病原体的存在及其对宿主免疫反应的影响,我们旨在提供一个被低估的情况的见解,进一步加深我们对严重程度决定因素的认识,这些决定因素可被视为未来诊断和干预策略的考虑因素。