Severe COVID-19 infection is associated with aberrant cytokine production by infected lung epithelial cells rather than by systemic immune dysfunction

严重的 COVID-19 感染与受感染的肺上皮细胞产生异常细胞因子有关,而非全身免疫功能障碍

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作者:Sherin J Rouhani, Jonathan A Trujillo, Athalia R Pyzer, Jovian Yu, Jessica Fessler, Alexandra Cabanov, Emily F Higgs, Kyle R Cron, Yuanyuan Zha, Yihao Lu, Jeffrey C Bloodworth, Mustafa Fatih Abasiyanik, Susan Okrah, Blake A Flood, Ken Hatogai, Michael Yk Leung, Apameh Pezeshk, Lara Kozloff, Robin Re

Abstract

The mechanisms explaining progression to severe COVID-19 remain poorly understood. It has been proposed that immune system dysregulation/over-stimulation may be implicated, but it is not clear how such processes would lead to respiratory failure. We performed comprehensive multiparameter immune monitoring in a tightly controlled cohort of 128 COVID-19 patients, and used the ratio of oxygen saturation to fraction of inspired oxygen (SpO2 / FiO2) as a physiologic measure of disease severity. Machine learning algorithms integrating 139 parameters identified IL-6 and CCL2 as two factors predictive of severe disease, consistent with the therapeutic benefit observed with anti-IL6-R antibody treatment. However, transcripts encoding these cytokines were not detected among circulating immune cells. Rather, in situ analysis of lung specimens using RNAscope and immunofluorescent staining revealed that elevated IL-6 and CCL2 were dominantly produced by infected lung type II pneumocytes. Severe disease was not associated with higher viral load, deficient antibody responses, or dysfunctional T cell responses. These results refine our understanding of severe COVID-19 pathophysiology, indicating that aberrant cytokine production by infected lung epithelial cells is a major driver of immunopathology. We propose that these factors cause local immune regulation towards the benefit of the virus.

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