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Elevated IFNA1 and suppressed IL12p40 associated with persistent hyperinflammation in COVID-19 pneumonia

Authors :
Kyeongseok Jeon
Yuri Kim
Shin Kwang Kang
Uni Park
Jayoun Kim
Nanhee Park
Jaemoon Koh
Man-Shik Shim
Minsoo Kim
Youn Ju Rhee
Hyeongseok Jeong
Siyoung Lee
Donghyun Park
Jinyoung Lim
Hyunsu Kim
Na-Young Ha
Hye-Yeong Jo
Sang Cheol Kim
Ju-Hee Lee
Jiwon Shon
Hoon Kim
Yoon Kyung Jeon
Youn-Soo Choi
Hye Young Kim
Won-Woo Lee
Murim Choi
Hyun-Young Park
Woong-Yang Park
Yeon-Sook Kim
Nam-Hyuk Cho
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology. 14
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2023.

Abstract

IntroductionDespite of massive endeavors to characterize inflammation in COVID-19 patients, the core network of inflammatory mediators responsible for severe pneumonia stillremain remains elusive. MethodsHere, we performed quantitative and kinetic analysis of 191 inflammatory factors in 955 plasma samples from 80 normal controls (sample n = 80) and 347 confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia patients (sample n = 875), including 8 deceased patients. ResultsDifferential expression analysis showed that 76% of plasmaproteins (145 factors) were upregulated in severe COVID-19 patients comparedwith moderate patients, confirming overt inflammatory responses in severe COVID-19 pneumonia patients. Global correlation analysis of the plasma factorsrevealed two core inflammatory modules, core I and II, comprising mainly myeloid cell and lymphoid cell compartments, respectively, with enhanced impact in a severity-dependent manner. We observed elevated IFNA1 and suppressed IL12p40, presenting a robust inverse correlation in severe patients, which was strongly associated with persistent hyperinflammation in 8.3% of moderate pneumonia patients and 59.4% of severe patients. DiscussionAberrant persistence of pulmonary and systemic inflammation might be associated with long COVID-19 sequelae. Our comprehensive analysis of inflammatory mediators in plasmarevealed the complexity of pneumonic inflammation in COVID-19 patients anddefined critical modules responsible for severe pneumonic progression.

Subjects

Subjects :
Immunology
Immunology and Allergy

Details

ISSN :
16643224
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7f402c31293233165629e318b4978094