Discriminating Mild from Critical COVID-19 by Innate and Adaptive Immune Single-cell Profiling of Bronchoalveolar Lavages

Author:

Wauters Els,Van Mol Pierre,Garg Abhishek D.,Jansen Sander,Van Herck Yannick,Vanderbeke Lore,Bassez Ayse,Boeckx Bram,Malengier-Devlies Bert,Timmerman Anna,Van Brussel Thomas,Van Buyten Tina,Schepers Rogier,Heylen Elisabeth,Dauwe Dieter,Dooms Christophe,Gunst Jan,Hermans Greet,Meersseman Philippe,Testelmans Dries,Yserbyt Jonas,Matthys Patrick,Tejpar Sabine,Neyts Johan,Wauters Joost,Qian JunbinORCID,Lambrechts Diether,

Abstract

ABSTRACTHow innate and adaptive lung immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 synchronize during COVID-19 pneumonitis and regulate disease severity is poorly established. To address this, we applied single-cell profiling to bronchoalveolar lavages from 44 patients with mild or critical COVID-19versusnon-COVID-19 pneumonia as control. Viral RNA-tracking delineated the infection phenotype to epithelial cells, but positioned mainly neutrophils at the forefront of viral clearance activity during COVID-19. In mild disease, neutrophils could execute their antiviral function in an immunologically ‘controlled’ fashion, regulated by fully-differentiated T-helper-17 (TH17)-cells, as well as T-helper-1 (TH1)-cells, CD8+resident-memory (TRM) and partially-exhausted (TEX) T-cells with good effector functions. This was paralleled by ‘orderly’ phagocytic disposal of dead/stressed cells by fully-differentiated macrophages, otherwise characterized by anti-inflammatory and antigen-presenting characteristics, hence facilitating lung tissue repair. In critical disease, CD4+TH1- and CD8+TEX-cells were characterized by inflammation-associated stress and metabolic exhaustion, while CD4+TH17- and CD8+TRM-cells failed to differentiate. Consequently, T-cell effector function was largely impaired thereby possibly facilitating excessive neutrophil-based inflammation. This was accompanied by impaired monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation, with monocytes exhibiting an ATP-purinergic signalling-inflammasome footprint, thereby enabling COVID-19 associated fibrosis and worsening disease severity. Our work represents a major resource for understanding the lung-localised immunity and inflammation landscape during COVID-19.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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