Lymphatic coagulation and neutrophil extracellular traps in lung-draining lymph nodes of COVID-19 decedents

Author:

MacDonald Margo E.12ORCID,Weathered Rachel K.1,Stewart Emma C.13,Magold Alexandra I.1,Mukherjee Anish1ORCID,Gurbuxani Sandeep4ORCID,Smith Heather4,McMullen Phillip4,Mueller Jeffrey4,Husain Aliya N.4,Salles Calixto M.1,Briquez Priscilla S.1ORCID,Rouhani Sherin J.5,Yu Jovian5,Trujillo Jonathan5,Pyzer Athalia R.5ORCID,Gajewski Thomas F.356,Sperling Anne I.36ORCID,Kilarski Witold W.1ORCID,Swartz Melody A.136

Affiliation:

1. 1Pritzker School for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

2. 2Biophysical Sciences Program, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

3. 3Committee on Immunology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

4. 4Department of Pathology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

5. 5Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

6. 6Ben May Department of Cancer Research, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Abstract

Abstract Clinical manifestations of severe COVID-19 include coagulopathies that are exacerbated by the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Here, we report that pulmonary lymphatic vessels, which traffic neutrophils and other immune cells to the lung-draining lymph node (LDLN), can also be blocked by fibrin clots in severe COVID-19. Immunostained tissue sections from COVID-19 decedents revealed widespread lymphatic clotting not only in the lung but also in the LDLN, where the extent of clotting correlated with the presence of abnormal, regressed, or missing germinal centers (GCs). It strongly correlated with the presence of intralymphatic NETs. In mice, tumor necrosis factor α induced intralymphatic fibrin clots; this could be inhibited by DNase I, which degrades NETs. In vitro, TNF-α induced lymphatic endothelial cell upregulation of ICAM-1 and CXCL8, among other neutrophil-recruiting factors, as well as thrombomodulin downregulation; in decedents, lymphatic clotting in LDLNs. In a separate cohort of hospitalized patients, serum levels of Myeloperoxidase-DNA (MPO-DNA, a NET marker) inversely correlated with antiviral antibody titers, but D-dimer levels, indicative of blood thrombosis, did not correlate with either. Patients with high MPO-DNA but low D-dimer levels generated poor antiviral antibody titers. This study introduces lymphatic coagulation in lungs and LDLNs as a clinical manifestation of severe COVID-19 and suggests the involvement of NETosis of lymphatic-trafficking neutrophils. It further suggests that lymphatic clotting may correlate with impaired formation or maintenance of GCs necessary for robust antiviral antibody responses, although further studies are needed to determine whether and how lymphatic coagulation affects adaptive immune responses.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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