Post‐hospitalization rehabilitation alleviates long‐term immune repertoire alteration in COVID‐19 convalescent patients

Author:

Feng Bing12345,Zheng Danwen15,Yang Laijun15,Su Zuqing12345,Tang Lipeng12345,Zhu Ying12345,Xu Xiaohua15,Wang Qian15,Lin Qiaoli1,Hu Jiajun15,Lin Meixuan15,Huang Liqun15,Zhou Xin15,Liu Han1,Li Song67,Pan Wenjing6,Shi Rongdong15,Lu Yanjing15,Wu Bin1,Ding Banghan1,Wang Zhe1,Guo Jianwen12345,Zhang Zhongde1234,Zheng Guangjuan12345ORCID,Liu Yuntao135

Affiliation:

1. Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine & Guangdong Provincial Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences Guangzhou China

2. Guangdong‐Hong Kong‐Macau Joint Lab on Chinese Medicine and Immune Disease Research Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine Guangzhou China

3. State Key Laboratory of Dampness Syndrome of Chinese Medicine The Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine Guangzhou China

4. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Chinese Medicine for Prevention and Treatment of Refractory Chronic Diseases Guangzhou China

5. The Second Clinical College of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine Guangzhou China

6. Hunan Key Laboratory of Biomedical Nanomaterials and Devices Hunan University of Technology Zhuzhou China

7. Hengyang Medical School University of South China Hengyang China

Abstract

AbstractThe global pandemic of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) is an once‐in‐a‐lifetime public health crisis. Among hundreds of millions of people who have contracted with or are being infected with COVID‐19, the question of whether COVID‐19 infection may cause long‐term health concern, even being completely recovered from the disease clinically, especially immune system damage, needs to be addressed. Here, we performed seven‐chain adaptome immune repertoire analyses on convalescent COVID‐19 patients who have been discharged from hospitals for at least 6 months. Surprisingly, we discovered lymphopenia, reduced number of unique CDR3s, and reduced diversity of the TCR/BCR immune repertoire in convalescent COVID‐19 patients. In addition, the BCR repertoire appears to be activated, which is consistent with the protective antibody titres, but serological experiments reveal significantly lower IL‐4 and IL‐7 levels in convalescent patients compared to those in healthy controls. Finally, in comparison with convalescent patients who did not receive post‐hospitalization rehabilitation, the convalescent patients who received post‐hospitalization rehabilitation had attenuated immune repertoire abnormality, almost back to the level of healthy control, despite no detectable clinic demographic difference. Overall, we report the potential long‐term immunological impairment for COVID‐19 infection, and correction of this impairment via post‐hospitalization rehabilitation may offer a new prospect for COVID‐19 recovery strategy.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,General Medicine

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