4.8 Article

COVID-19 tissue atlases reveal SARS-CoV-2 pathology and cellular targets

Journal

NATURE
Volume 595, Issue 7865, Pages 107-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03570-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Manton Foundation
  2. Klarman Family Foundation
  3. HHMI
  4. Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
  5. Human Tumor Atlas Network trans-network projects SARDANA (Shared Repositories, Data, Analysis and Access)
  6. DARPA [HR0011-20-2-0040]
  7. US Food and Drug Administration [HHSF223201810172C]
  8. National Institute of Health Director's New Innovator Award [DP2CA247831]
  9. Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Transformative Scholar in Medicine Award
  10. COVID-19 Clinical Trials Pilot grant from the Executive Committee on Research at MGH
  11. Damon Runyon-Rachleff Innovation Award
  12. NIH [R01AA0207440, U01AA026933]
  13. National Institute of Health (NIH) [K08CA222663, R37CA258829, U54CA225088]
  14. FastGrants
  15. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists
  16. NIH/NCI Cancer Center at Columbia University [P30CA013696]
  17. [U01 HG009379]
  18. [R01 MH101244]
  19. [R37 MH107649]

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This study using single-cell and spatial atlases revealed the impact of COVID-19 infection on lung, kidney, liver, and heart tissues, showing structural remodeling and viral RNA enrichment. Differences in lung inflammatory responses and transcriptional alterations in heart tissue of COVID-19 patients were also identified, along with cell types and genes associated with disease severity.
COVID-19, which is caused by SARS-CoV-2, can result in acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiple organ failure1-4, but little is known about its pathophysiology. Here we generated single-cell atlases of 24 lung, 16 kidney, 16 liver and 19 heart autopsy tissue samples and spatial atlases of 14 lung samples from donors who died of COVID-19. Integrated computational analysis uncovered substantial remodelling in the lung epithelial, immune and stromal compartments, with evidence of multiple paths of failed tissue regeneration, including defective alveolar type 2 differentiation and expansion of fibroblasts and putative TP63(+) intrapulmonary basal-like progenitor cells. Viral RNAs were enriched in mononuclear phagocytic and endothelial lung cells, which induced specific host programs. Spatial analysis in lung distinguished inflammatory host responses in lung regions with and without viral RNA. Analysis of the other tissue atlases showed transcriptional alterations in multiple cell types in heart tissue from donors with COVID-19, and mapped cell types and genes implicated with disease severity based on COVID-19 genome-wide association studies. Our foundational dataset elucidates the biological effect of severe SARS-CoV-2 infection across the body, a key step towards new treatments.

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