Author:
de Oliveira Formiga Rodrigo,Pesenti Lucie,Ladjemi Maha Zohra,Frachet Philippe,Andrieu Muriel,Many Souganya,Karunanithy Vaarany,Bailly Karine,Dhôte Théo,Castel Manon,Rousseau Christophe,Starick Marick,da Rocha Edroaldo Lummertz,Lombardi Emilia Puig,Granger Vanessa,Chollet-Martin Sylvie,De Chaisemartin Luc,Mouthon Luc,Spiller Fernando,Hosmalin Anne,Hurtado-Nedelec Margarita,Martin Clémence,Pène Frédéric,Burgel Pierre-Regis,Tourneur Léa,Witko-Sarsat Véronique
Abstract
AbstractNeutrophils are key players in the hyperinflammatory response upon SARS-CoV-2 infection. We have previously described that cytosolic proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) controls neutrophil survival and NADPH oxidase-dependent ROS production. We here show that both PCNA and S100A8 expression and interaction were elevated in neutrophils from patients with COVID-19 compared to healthy donors and this was correlated with disease severity. Increased PCNA expression was accompanied by a decreased apoptosis and increased NADPH-oxidase activity in neutrophils from COVID-19 patients compared to healthy donors. These effects, as well as the interaction between PCNA and S100A8, were potently counteracted by T2 amino alcohol (T2AA), a PCNA inhibitor, demonstrating that the PCNA scaffold orchestrated neutrophil activation. Notably, the interaction between PCNA-S100A8 was more intense in the CD16high-CD62Llowactivated neutrophil subset. We propose that PCNA-S100A8 complex acts as potential driver for neutrophil dysregulation in COVID-19 and show for the first time that the PCNA scaffold is a decisive component of both neutrophil activation and heterogeneity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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