Defining resistance and tolerance traits in Covid-19: towards a stratified medicine approach

Author:

Russell C D1ORCID,Clohisey Hendry S2

Affiliation:

1. Queen’s Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh Centre for Inflammation Research , Edinburgh BioQuarter, 47 Little France Crescent , Edinburgh EH16 4TJ, UK

2. Division of Genetics and Genomics, Roslin Institute, University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush Campus , Midlothian EH25 9RG, UK

Abstract

Abstract Successful host defence against infectious disease involves resistance (reduce pathogen load) and tolerance (reduce tissue damage associated with pathogen presence). Integration of clinical, immunologic, genetic and therapeutic discoveries has identified defects in both of these responses in the progression from SARS-CoV-2 infection to life-threatening coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) lung injury. Early after infection with SARS-CoV-2, resistance can be compromised by a failed type 1 interferon (IFN-I) response, due to direct viral antagonism of induction and signalling, deleterious host genetic variants (IFNAR2, IFNA10, TYK2 and PLSCR1), and neutralizing auto-antibodies directed against IFN-I (predominantly IFN-α). Later in the disease, after pathogen sensing has activated a pro-inflammatory response, a failure to appropriately regulate this response compromises tolerance resulting in virus-independent immunopathology involving the lung and reticuloendothelial system. Monocytes are activated in the periphery (involving M-CSF, GM-CSF, IL-6, NLRP1 inflammasomes, TYK2 and afucosylated anti-spike IgG) then recruited to the lung (involving CCR2::MCP-3/MCP-1 and C5a::C5aR1 axes) as pro-inflammatory monocyte-derived macrophages, resulting in inflammatory lung injury. Phenotypic and genotypic heterogeneity is apparent in all these responses, identifying ‘treatable traits’ (therapeutically relevant components of inter-individual variation) which could be exploited to achieve a stratified medicine approach to Covid-19. Overall, Covid-19 pathogenesis re-affirms the importance of resistance in surviving an infectious disease and highlights that tolerance is also a central pillar of host defence in humans and can be beneficially modified using host-directed therapies.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Edinburgh Clinical Academic Track (ECAT)/Wellcome Trust PhD Training Fellowship for Clinicians

BBSRC funding at The Roslin Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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1. FLiRT a dominant COVID variant responsible for a summer surge in COVID infections;QJM: An International Journal of Medicine;2024-07-01

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