Two distinct immunopathological profiles in autopsy lungs of COVID-19
Date
2020Author
Nienhold, Ronny
Ciani, Yari
Koelzer, Viktor H.
Tzankov, Alexandar
Haslbauer, Jasmin D.
Menter, Thomas
Schwab, Nathalie
Henkel, Maurice
Frank, Angela
Zsikla, Veronika
Willi, Niels
Kempf, Werner
Hoyler, Thomas
Barbareschi, Mattia
Moch, Holger
Tolnay, Markus
Cathomas, Gieri
Demichelis, Francesca
Junt, Tobias
Mertz, Kirsten D.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19) is a respiratory disease caused by severe acute
respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which has grown to a worldwide pandemic with substantial mortality. Immune mediated damage has been proposed as a
pathogenic factor, but immune responses in lungs of COVID-19 patients remain poorly
characterized. Here we show transcriptomic, histologic and cellular profiles of post mortem
COVID-19 (n = 34 tissues from 16 patients) and normal lung tissues (n = 9 tissues from 6
patients). Two distinct immunopathological reaction patterns of lethal COVID-19 are identified. One pattern shows high local expression of interferon stimulated genes (ISGhigh) and
cytokines, high viral loads and limited pulmonary damage, the other pattern shows severely
damaged lungs, low ISGs (ISGlow), low viral loads and abundant infiltrating activated CD8+
T cells and macrophages. ISGhigh patients die significantly earlier after hospitalization than
ISGlow patients. Our study may point to distinct stages of progression of COVID-19 lung
disease and highlights the need for peripheral blood biomarkers that inform about patient
lung status and guide treatment.
Palabras clave
Immunopathological profiles; Autopsy lungs; OVID-19Link to resource
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18854-2Collections
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