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Severe T cell hyporeactivity in ventilated COVID-19 patients correlates with prolonged virus persistence and poor outcomes

Authors :
Dirk Lunz
Charlotte Tiefenböck
Jan-Niklas Salewski
Christine Müller
Evelyn Orsó
Maximilian V. Malfertheiner
Matthias Lubnow
Tobias Schwittay
Kerstin Renner
Tanja Niedermair
Florian Hitzenbichler
Christoph Brochhausen
Saidou Balam
Bernhard M. Graf
Bernd Salzberger
Marina Kreutz
André Gessner
Frederike Winter
Frank Hanses
Hendrik Poeck
Simone Buchtler
Matthias Mack
Ralph Burkhardt
Johanna Gottschling
Sophia Chaabane
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) can lead to pneumonia and hyperinflammation. Here we show a sensitive method to measure polyclonal T cell activation by downstream effects on responder cells like basophils, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, monocytes and neutrophils in whole blood. We report a clear T cell hyporeactivity in hospitalized COVID-19 patients that is pronounced in ventilated patients, associated with prolonged virus persistence and reversible with clinical recovery. COVID-19-induced T cell hyporeactivity is T cell extrinsic and caused by plasma components, independent of occasional immunosuppressive medication of the patients. Monocytes respond stronger in males than females and IL-2 partially restores T cell activation. Downstream markers of T cell hyporeactivity are also visible in fresh blood samples of ventilated patients. Based on our data we developed a score to predict fatal outcomes and identify patients that may benefit from strategies to overcome T cell hyporeactivity.<br />Perturbed T cell responses and disturbed cytokine secretion have been shown during SARS-CoV2 infection in patients. Here the authors show reduced polyclonal T cell activity in COVID-19 patients that is caused by plasma factors and linked to poor prognosis and viral persistence.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b685a2080ff2465cd916a1ad2596d82