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[Preprint]. 2020 Oct 18:2020.10.15.20208041. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2020.10.15.20208041

Analysis of respiratory and systemic immune responses in COVID-19 reveals mechanisms of disease pathogenesis

Peter A Szabo, Pranay Dogra, Joshua I Gray, Steven B Wells, Thomas J Connors, Stuart P Weisberg, Izabela Krupska, Rei Matsumoto, Maya ML Poon, Emma Idzikowski, Sinead E Morris, Chloé Pasin, Andrew J Yates, Amy Ku, Michael Chait, Julia Davis-Porada, Jing Zhou, Matthew Steinle, Sean Mackay, Anjali Saqi, Matthew Baldwin, Peter A Sims, Donna L Farber
PMCID: PMC7587837  PMID: 33106817

SUMMARY

Immune responses to respiratory viruses like SARS-CoV-2 originate and function in the lung, yet assessments of human immunity are often limited to blood. Here, we conducted longitudinal, high-dimensional profiling of paired airway and blood samples from patients with severe COVID-19, revealing immune processes in the respiratory tract linked to disease pathogenesis. Survival from severe disease was associated with increased CD4 + T cells and decreased monocyte/macrophage frequencies in the airway, but not in blood. Airway T cells and macrophages exhibited tissue-resident phenotypes and activation signatures, including high level expression and secretion of monocyte chemoattractants CCL2 and CCL3 by airway macrophages. By contrast, monocytes in blood expressed the CCL2-receptor CCR2 and aberrant CD163 + and immature phenotypes. Extensive accumulation of CD163 + monocyte/macrophages within alveolar spaces in COVID-19 lung autopsies suggested recruitment from circulation. Our findings provide evidence that COVID-19 pathogenesis is driven by respiratory immunity, and rationale for site-specific treatment and prevention strategies.

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