Integrated longitudinal multi-omics study identifies immune programs associated with COVID-19 severity and mortality in 1152 hospitalized participants
Author:
Gygi Jeremy P.ORCID, Maguire ColeORCID, Patel Ravi K.ORCID, Shinde PramodORCID, Konstorum AnnaORCID, Shannon Casey P.ORCID, Xu LeqiORCID, Hoch AnnmarieORCID, Jayavelu Naresh DoniORCID, Network IMPACC, Haddad Elias K.ORCID, Reed Elaine F.ORCID, Kraft MonicaORCID, McComsey Grace A.ORCID, Metcalf JordanORCID, Ozonoff AlORCID, Esserman DeniseORCID, Cairns Charles B.ORCID, Rouphael NadineORCID, Bosinger Steven E.ORCID, Kim-Schulze Seunghee, Krammer FlorianORCID, Rosen Lindsey B., van Bakel HarmORCID, Wilson MichaelORCID, Eckalbar WalterORCID, Maecker HoldenORCID, Langelier Charles R.ORCID, Steen HannoORCID, Altman Matthew C.ORCID, Montgomery Ruth R.ORCID, Levy OferORCID, Melamed EstherORCID, Pulendran BaliORCID, Diray-Arce JoannORCID, Smolen Kinga K.ORCID, Fragiadakis Gabriela K.ORCID, Becker Patrice M.ORCID, Augustine Alison D.ORCID, Sekaly Rafick P.ORCID, Ehrlich Lauren I. R.ORCID, Fourati SlimORCID, Peters BjoernORCID, Kleinstein Steven H.ORCID, Guan LeyingORCID
Abstract
AbstractHospitalized COVID-19 patients exhibit diverse clinical outcomes, with some individuals diverging over time even though their initial disease severity appears similar. A systematic evaluation of molecular and cellular profiles over the full disease course can link immune programs and their coordination with progression heterogeneity. In this study, we carried out deep immunophenotyping and conducted longitudinal multi-omics modeling integrating ten distinct assays on a total of 1,152 IMPACC participants and identified several immune cascades that were significant drivers of differential clinical outcomes. Increasing disease severity was driven by a temporal pattern that began with the early upregulation of immunosuppressive metabolites and then elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines, signatures of coagulation, NETosis, and T-cell functional dysregulation. A second immune cascade, predictive of 28-day mortality among critically ill patients, was characterized by reduced total plasma immunoglobulins and B cells, as well as dysregulated IFN responsiveness. We demonstrated that the balance disruption between IFN-stimulated genes and IFN inhibitors is a crucial biomarker of COVID-19 mortality, potentially contributing to the failure of viral clearance in patients with fatal illness. Our longitudinal multi-omics profiling study revealed novel temporal coordination across diverse omics that potentially explain disease progression, providing insights that inform the targeted development of therapies for hospitalized COVID-19 patients, especially those critically ill.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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