A robust Platform for Integrative Spatial Multi-omics Analysis to Map Immune Responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection in Lung Tissues

Author:

Tan XiaoORCID,Grice Laura F.,Tran Minh,Mulay Onkar,Monkman James,Blick Tony,Vo Tuan,Almeida Ana Clara Simões Flórido,Junior Jarbas da Silva Motta,de Moura Karen Fernandes,Machado-Souza Cleber,Souza-Fonseca-Guimaraes Paulo,Baena Cristina Pellegrino,de Noronha Lucia,Guimaraes Fernanda Simoes Fortes,Luu Hung N.,Drennon Tingsheng,Williams Stephen,Stern Jacob,Uytingco Cedric,Pan Liuliu,Nam Andy,Cooper Caroline,Short Kirsty,Belz Gabrielle T.,Souza-Fonseca-Guimaraes Fernando,Kulasinghe Arutha,Nguyen Quan

Abstract

AbstractThe SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) virus has caused a devastating global pandemic of respiratory illness. To understand viral pathogenesis, methods are available for studying dissociated cells in blood, nasal samples, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, and similar, but a robust platform for deep tissue characterisation of molecular and cellular responses to virus infection in the lungs is still lacking. We developed an innovative spatial multi-omics platform to investigate COVID-19-infected lung tissues. Five tissue-profiling technologies were combined by a novel computational mapping methodology to comprehensively characterise and compare the transcriptome and targeted proteome of virus infected and uninfected tissues. By integrating spatial transcriptomics data (Visium, GeoMx and RNAScope) and proteomics data (CODEX and PhenoImager HT) at different cellular resolutions across lung tissues, we found strong evidence for macrophage infiltration and defined the broader microenvironment surrounding these cells. By comparing infected and uninfected samples, we found an increase in cytokine signalling and interferon responses at different sites in the lung and showed spatial heterogeneity in the expression level of these pathways. These data demonstrate that integrative spatial multi-omics platforms can be broadly applied to gain a deeper understanding of viral effects on cellular environments at the site of infection and to increase our understanding of the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on the lungs.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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