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[Preprint]. 2022 Mar 28:2022.03.26.485922. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2022.03.26.485922

Unique molecular signatures sustained in circulating monocytes and regulatory T cells in Convalescent COVID-19 patients

Andrew D Hoffmann, Sam E Weinberg, Suchitra Swaminathan, Shuvam Chaudhuri, Hannah Faisal Mubarak, Matthew J Schipma, Chengsheng Mao, Xinkun Wang, Lamiaa El-Shennawy, Nurmaa K Dashzeveg, Juncheng Wei, Paul J Mehl, Laura J Shihadah, Ching Man Wai, Carolina Ostiguin, Yuzhi Jia, Paolo D’Amico, Neale R Wang, Yuan Luo, Alexis R Demonbreun, Michael G Ison, Huiping Liu, Deyu Fang
PMCID: PMC8978941  PMID: 35378753

Abstract

Over two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, the human immune response to SARS-CoV-2 during the active disease phase has been extensively studied. However, the long-term impact after recovery, which is critical to advance our understanding SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19-associated long-term complications, remains largely unknown. Herein, we characterized multi-omic single-cell profiles of circulating immune cells in the peripheral blood of 100 patients, including covenlesent COVID-19 and sero-negative controls. The reduced frequencies of both short-lived monocytes and long-lived regulatory T (Treg) cells are significantly associated with the patients recovered from severe COVID-19. Consistently, sc-RNA seq analysis reveals seven heterogeneous clusters of monocytes (M0-M6) and ten Treg clusters (T0-T9) featuring distinct molecular signatures and associated with COVID-19 severity. Asymptomatic patients contain the most abundant clusters of monocyte and Treg expressing high CD74 or IFN-responsive genes. In contrast, the patients recovered from a severe disease have shown two dominant inflammatory monocyte clusters with S100 family genes: S100A8 & A9 with high HLA-I whereas S100A4 & A6 with high HLA-II genes, a specific non-classical monocyte cluster with distinct IFITM family genes, and a unique TGF-β high Treg Cluster. The outpatients and seronegative controls share most of the monocyte and Treg clusters patterns with high expression of HLA genes. Surprisingly, while presumably short-ived monocytes appear to have sustained alterations over 4 months, the decreased frequencies of long-lived Tregs (high HLA-DRA and S100A6) in the outpatients restore over the tested convalescent time (>= 4 months). Collectively, our study identifies sustained and dynamically altered monocytes and Treg clusters with distinct molecular signatures after recovery, associated with COVID-19 severity.

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