Metabolic stress and disease-stage specific basigin expression of peripheral blood immune cell subsets in COVID-19 patients
Author:
Siska Peter J.ORCID, Singer Katrin, Klitzke Jana, Kauer Nathalie, Decking Sonja-Maria, Bruss Christina, Matos Carina, Kolodova Kristina, Peuker Alice, Schönhammer Gabriele, Raithel Johanna, Lunz Dirk, Graf Bernhard, Geismann Florian, Lubnow Matthias, Mack Matthias, Hau Peter, Bohr Christopher, Burkhardt Ralph, Gessner Andre, Salzberger Bernd, Hanses Frank, Hitzenbichler Florian, Heudobler Daniel, Lüke Florian, Pukrop Tobias, Herr Wolfgang, Wolff Daniel, Poeck Hendrik, Brochhausen Christoph, Hoffmann Petra, Rehli Michael, Kreutz Marina, Renner Kathrin
Abstract
SummaryCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is driven by dysregulated immune responses yet the role of immunometabolism in COVID-19 pathogenesis remains unclear. By investigating 47 patients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and 16 uninfected controls, we found an immunometabolic dysregulation specific for patients with progressed disease that was reversible in the recovery phase. Specifically, T cells and monocytes exhibited increased mitochondrial mass, accumulated intracellular ROS and these changes were accompanied by disrupted mitochondrial architecture. Basigin (CD147), but not established markers of T cell activation, was up-regulated on T cells from progressed COVID-19 patients and correlated with ROS accumulation, reflected in the transcriptome. During recovery, basigin and ROS decreased to match the uninfected controls. In vitro analyses confirmed the correlation and showed a down-regulation of ROS by dexamethasone treatment. Our findings provide evidence of a basigin-related and reversible immunometabolic dysregulation in COVID-19.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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