4.8 Article

Deep immune profiling of COVID-19 patients reveals distinct immunotypes with therapeutic implications

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 369, Issue 6508, Pages 1209-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abc8511

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Pennsylvania Institute for Immunology Glick COVID-19 research award
  2. NIH [CA234842, AI105343, AI082630, HL137006, H137915, CA230157, T32 CA009140]
  3. Allen Institute for Immunology
  4. NHLBI StARR [1R38HL143613]
  5. Athersys, Inc.
  6. Biomarck, Inc.
  7. Marcus Foundation for Research
  8. Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is currently a global pandemic, but human immune responses to the virus remain poorly understood. We used high-dimensional cytometry to analyze 125 COVID-19 patients and compare them with recovered and healthy individuals. Integrated analysis of similar to 200 immune and similar to 50 clinical features revealed activation of T cell and B cell subsets in a proportion of patients. A subgroup of patients had T cell activation characteristic of acute viral infection and plasmablast responses reaching >30% of circulating B cells. However, another subgroup had lymphocyte activation comparable with that in uninfected individuals. Stable versus dynamic immunological signatures were identified and linked to trajectories of disease severity change. Our analyses identified three immunotypes associated with poor clinical trajectories versus improving health. These immunotypes may have implications for the design of therapeutics and vaccines for COVID-19.

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