Prolonged exposure to lung-derived cytokines is associated with inflammatory activation of microglia in patients with COVID-19

长期接触肺源性细胞因子与 COVID-19 患者小胶质细胞的炎症激活有关

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作者:Rogan A Grant, Taylor A Poor, Lango Sichizya, Estefani Diaz, Joseph I Bailey, Sahil Soni, Karolina J Senkow, Xochítl G Pérez-Leonor, Hiam Abdala-Valencia, Ziyan Lu, Helen K Donnelly, Robert M Tighe, Jon W Lomasney, Richard G Wunderink, Benjamin D Singer, Alexander V Misharin, Gr Scott Budinger

Abstract

Neurological impairment is the most common finding in patients with post-acute sequelae of COVID-19. Furthermore, survivors of pneumonia from any cause have an elevated risk of dementia1-4. Dysfunction in microglia, the primary immune cell in the brain, has been linked to cognitive impairment in murine models of dementia and in humans5. Here, we report a transcriptional response in human microglia collected from patients who died following COVID-19 suggestive of their activation by TNF-α and other circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. Consistent with these findings, the levels of 55 alveolar and plasma cytokines were elevated in a cohort of 341 patients with respiratory failure, including 93 unvaccinated patients with COVID-19 and 203 patients with other causes of pneumonia. While peak levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines were similar in patients with pneumonia irrespective of etiology, cumulative cytokine exposure was higher in patients with COVID-19. Corticosteroid treatment, which has been shown to be beneficial in patients with COVID-196, was associated with lower levels of CXCL10, CCL8, and CCL2-molecules that sustain inflammatory circuits between alveolar macrophages harboring SARS-CoV-2 and activated T cells7. These findings suggest that corticosteroids may break this cycle and decrease systemic exposure to lung-derived cytokines and inflammatory activation of microglia in patients with COVID-19.

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