Author:
Bibert Stéphanie,Guex Nicolas,Lourenco Joao,Brahier Thomas,Papadimitriou-Olivgeris Matthaios,Damonti Lauro,Manuel Oriol,Liechti Robin,Götz Lou,Tschopp Jonathan,Quinodoz Mathieu,Vollenweider Peter,Pagani Jean-Luc,Oddo Mauro,Hügli Olivier,Lamoth Frédéric,Erard Véronique,Voide Cathy,Delorenzi Mauro,Rufer Nathalie,Candotti Fabio,Rivolta Carlo,Boillat-Blanco Noémie,Bochud Pierre-Yves,
Abstract
The reason why most individuals with COVID-19 have relatively limited symptoms while other develop respiratory distress with life-threatening complications remains unknown. Increasing evidence suggests that COVID-19 associated adverse outcomes mainly rely on dysregulated immunity. Here, we compared transcriptomic profiles of blood cells from 103 patients with different severity levels of COVID-19 with that of 27 healthy and 22 influenza-infected individuals. Data provided a complete overview of SARS-CoV-2-induced immune signature, including a dramatic defect in IFN responses, a reduction of toxicity-related molecules in NK cells, an increased degranulation of neutrophils, a dysregulation of T cells, a dramatic increase in B cell function and immunoglobulin production, as well as an important over-expression of genes involved in metabolism and cell cycle in patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 compared to those infected with influenza viruses. These features also differed according to COVID-19 severity. Overall and specific gene expression patterns across groups can be visualized on an interactive website (https://bix.unil.ch/covid/). Collectively, these transcriptomic host responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection are discussed in the context of current studies, thereby improving our understanding of COVID-19 pathogenesis and shaping the severity level of COVID-19.
Funder
Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy