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T cell anergy in COVID-19 reflects virus persistence and poor outcomes

Authors :
Dirk Lunz
Niedermair T
Tiefenboeck C
Kerstin Renner
Florian Hitzenbichler
Matthias Mack
Hendrik Poeck
Frank Hanses
Frederike Winter
Maximilian V. Malfertheiner
C. Brochhausen
Ralph Burkhardt
Simone Buchtler
Evelyn Orsó
Bernd Salzberger
Marina Kreutz
André Gessner
Jan-Niklas Salewski
Matthias Lubnow
Mueller C
Bernhard M. Graf
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) can lead to severe pneumonia and hyperinflammation. So far, insufficient or excessive T cell responses were described in patients. We applied novel approaches to analyze T cell reactivity and showed that T anergy is already present in non-ventilated COVID-19 patients, very pronounced in ventilated patients, strongly associated with virus persistence and reversible with clinical recovery. T cell activation was measured by downstream effects on responder cells like basophils, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, monocytes and neutrophils in whole blood and proved to be much more meaningful than classical readouts with PBMCs. Monocytes responded stronger in males than females and IL-2 partially reversed T cell anergy. Downstream markers of T cell anergy were also found in fresh blood samples of critically ill patients with severe T cell anergy. Based on our data we were able to develop a score to predict fatal outcomes and to identify patients that may benefit from strategies to overcome T cell anergy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....887a1b883bcfd16bfcfba098eef2d17f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-76318/v1