Severe COVID-19 Shares a Common Neutrophil Activation Signature with Other Acute Inflammatory States

Author:

Schimke Lena F.ORCID,Marques Alexandre H. C.,Baiocchi Gabriela CrispimORCID,de Souza Prado Caroline AlianeORCID,Fonseca Dennyson Leandro M.,Freire Paula PaccielliORCID,Rodrigues Plaça Desirée,Salerno Filgueiras IgorORCID,Coelho Salgado RanieriORCID,Jansen-Marques Gabriel,Rocha Oliveira Antonio Edson,Peron Jean Pierre SchatzmannORCID,Cabral-Miranda Gustavo,Barbuto José Alexandre MarzagãoORCID,Camara Niels Olsen SaraivaORCID,Calich Vera Lúcia GarciaORCID,Ochs Hans D.,Condino-Neto AntonioORCID,Overmyer Katherine A.,Coon Joshua J.,Balnis Joseph,Jaitovich Ariel,Schulte-Schrepping Jonas,Ulas Thomas,Schultze Joachim L.,Nakaya Helder I.,Jurisica IgorORCID,Cabral-Marques Otávio

Abstract

Severe COVID-19 patients present a clinical and laboratory overlap with other hyperinflammatory conditions such as hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). However, the underlying mechanisms of these conditions remain to be explored. Here, we investigated the transcriptome of 1596 individuals, including patients with COVID-19 in comparison to healthy controls, other acute inflammatory states (HLH, multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children [MIS-C], Kawasaki disease [KD]), and different respiratory infections (seasonal coronavirus, influenza, bacterial pneumonia). We observed that COVID-19 and HLH share immunological pathways (cytokine/chemokine signaling and neutrophil-mediated immune responses), including gene signatures that stratify COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) and COVID-19_nonICU patients. Of note, among the common differentially expressed genes (DEG), there is a cluster of neutrophil-associated genes that reflects a generalized hyperinflammatory state since it is also dysregulated in patients with KD and bacterial pneumonia. These genes are dysregulated at the protein level across several COVID-19 studies and form an interconnected network with differentially expressed plasma proteins that point to neutrophil hyperactivation in COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit. scRNAseq analysis indicated that these genes are specifically upregulated across different leukocyte populations, including lymphocyte subsets and immature neutrophils. Artificial intelligence modeling confirmed the strong association of these genes with COVID-19 severity. Thus, our work indicates putative therapeutic pathways for intervention.

Funder

Latin American Society of Immunodeficiencies

São Paulo Research Foundation

Canada Foundation for Innovation

National Institutes of Health

Coordenação de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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