Author:
Hou Yuan,Zhou Yadi,Gack Michaela U.,Luo Yuan,Jehi Lara,Chan Timothy,Yu Haiyuan,Eng Charis,Pieper Andrew A.,Cheng Feixiong
Abstract
AbstractCoronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) is especially severe in aged patients, defined as 65 years or older, for reasons that are currently unknown. To investigate the underlying basis for this vulnerability, we performed multimodal data analyses on immunity, inflammation, and COVID-19 incidence and severity as a function of age. Our analysis leveraged age-specific COVID-19 mortality and laboratory testing from a large COVID-19 registry, along with epidemiological data of ∼3.4 million individuals, large-scale deep immune cell profiling data, and single-cell RNA-sequencing data from aged COVID-19 patients across diverse populations. To begin, we confirmed a significantly increased rate of severe outcomes in aged COVID-19 patients. Furthermore, we identified increased inflammatory markers (C-reactive protein, D-dimer, and neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio), viral entry factors in secretory cells, and TGFβ-mediated immune-epithelial cell interactions, as well as reduction in both naïve CD8 T cells and expression of interferon antiviral defense genes (i.e., IFITM3 and TRIM22), along with strong TGF-beta mediated immune-epithelial cell interactions (i.e., secretory - T regulatory cells), in aged severe COVID-19 patients. Taken together, our findings point to immuno-inflammatory factors that could be targeted therapeutically to reduce morbidity and mortality in aged COVID-19 patients.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory