Author:
Roukens Anna H.E.,König Marion,Dalebout Tim,Tak Tamar,Azimi Shohreh,Kruize Yvonne,Pothast Cilia R.,Hagedoorn Renate S.,Arbous Sesmu M.,Zhang Jaimie L. H.,Verheij Maaike,Prins Corine,van der Does Anne M.,Hiemstra Pieter S.,de Vries Jutte J.C.,Janse Jacqueline J.,Roestenberg Meta,Myeni Sebenzile K.,Kikkert Marjolein,Heemskerk Mirjam H.M.,Yazdanbakhsh Maria,Smits Hermelijn H.,Jochems Simon P.,
Abstract
AbstractThe immune system plays a major role in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pathogenesis, viral clearance and protection against re-infection. Immune cell dynamics during COVID-19 have been extensively documented in peripheral blood, but remain elusive in the respiratory tract. We performed minimally-invasive nasal curettage and mass cytometry to characterize nasal immune cells of COVID-19 patients during and 5-6 weeks after hospitalization. Contrary to observations in blood, no general T cell depletion at the nasal mucosa could be detected. Instead, we observed increased numbers of nasal granulocytes, monocytes, CD11c+ NK cells and exhausted CD4+ T effector memory cells during acute COVID-19 compared to age-matched healthy controls. These pro-inflammatory responses were found associated with viral load, while neutrophils also negatively correlated with oxygen saturation levels. Cell numbers mostly normalized following convalescence, except for persisting CD127+ granulocytes and activated T cells, including CD38+ CD8+ tissue-resident memory T cells. Moreover, we identified SARS-CoV-2 specific CD8+ T cells in the nasal mucosa in convalescent patients. Thus, COVID-19 has both transient and long-term effects on the immune system in the upper airway.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
5 articles.
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