4.8 Article

Profound Treg perturbations correlate with COVID-19 severity

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2111315118

Keywords

COVID-19; Tregs; tumor Tregs; FoxP3

Funding

  1. Massachusetts Consortium for Pathogen Readiness (MassCPR) [R01 AI150686]
  2. JPB Foundation
  3. Mark and Lisa Schwartz Foundation
  4. Ragon Institute of MGH, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Harvard
  5. European Molecular Biology Organization [ALTF 547-2019]
  6. INSERM Poste d'Accueil
  7. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32GM007753]
  8. Harvard Stem Cell Institute MD/PhD Training Fellowship
  9. NIH/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [P30-AI 060354]
  10. Arthur Sachs scholarship
  11. [R24 AI072073]

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Severe COVID-19 is characterized by an uncontrolled inflammatory response, potentially linked to dysregulation in T regulatory cells (Treg) which may suppress antiviral T cell responses and have a direct proinflammatory role.
The hallmark of severe COVID-19 is an uncontrolled inflammatory response, resulting from poorly understood immunological dysfunction. We hypothesized that perturbations in FoxP3+ T regulatory cells (Treg), key enforcers of immune homeostasis, contribute to COVID-19 pathology. Cytometric and transcriptomic profiling revealed a distinct Treg phenotype in severe COVID-19 patients, with an increase in Treg proportions and intracellular levels of the lineage-defining transcription factor FoxP3, correlating with poor outcomes. These Tregs showed a distinct transcriptional signature, with overexpression of several suppressive effectors, but also proinflammatory molecules like interleukin (IL)-32, and a striking similarity to tumor-infiltrating Tregs that suppress antitumor responses. Most marked during acute severe disease, these traits persisted somewhat in convalescent patients. A screen for candidate agents revealed that IL-6 and IL-18 may individually contribute different facets of these COVID-19-linked perturbations. These results suggest that Tregs may play nefarious roles in COVID-19, by suppressing antiviral T cell responses during the severe phase of the disease, and by a direct proinflammatory role.

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