4.8 Article

Signaling Through FcγRIIA and the C5a-C5aR Pathway Mediate Platelet Hyperactivation in COVID-19

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.834988

Keywords

platelet; COVID-19; Fc gamma RIIa; complement; fostamatinib

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [AI105343, AI08263, HL137006, HL137915, T32 AR076951-01, CA230157, R35 HL150698]
  2. Allen Institute for Immunology
  3. UPenn Institute for Immunology
  4. Chen Family Research Fund
  5. University of Pennsylvania
  6. NIAID/NIH [K08 AI136660]
  7. Tara Miller Foundation
  8. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NIH) [PO1 HL120846, PO1 HL40387]
  9. Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy

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Patients with severe COVID-19 exhibit higher levels of platelet activation, which is associated with poor clinical outcomes and thrombotic events. Plasma from COVID-19 patients activates platelets from healthy donors and is correlated with kidney and liver injury. Blocking certain signaling pathways reverses this platelet hyperactivity.
Patients with COVID-19 present with a wide variety of clinical manifestations. Thromboembolic events constitute a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in patients infected with SARS-CoV-2. Severe COVID-19 has been associated with hyperinflammation and pre-existing cardiovascular disease. Platelets are important mediators and sensors of inflammation and are directly affected by cardiovascular stressors. In this report, we found that platelets from severely ill, hospitalized COVID-19 patients exhibited higher basal levels of activation measured by P-selectin surface expression and had poor functional reserve upon in vitro stimulation. To investigate this question in more detail, we developed an assay to assess the capacity of plasma from COVID-19 patients to activate platelets from healthy donors. Platelet activation was a common feature of plasma from COVID-19 patients and correlated with key measures of clinical outcome including kidney and liver injury, and APACHEIII scores. Further, we identified ferritin as a pivotal clinical marker associated with platelet hyperactivation. The COVID-19 plasma-mediated effect on control platelets was highest for patients that subsequently developed inpatient thrombotic events. Proteomic analysis of plasma from COVID-19 patients identified key mediators of inflammation and cardiovascular disease that positively correlated with in vitro platelet activation. Mechanistically, blocking the signaling of the Fc gamma RIIa-Syk and C5a-C5aR pathways on platelets, using antibody-mediated neutralization, IgG depletion or the Syk inhibitor fostamatinib, reversed this hyperactivity driven by COVID-19 plasma and prevented platelet aggregation in endothelial microfluidic chamber conditions. These data identified these potentially actionable pathways as central for platelet activation and/or vascular complications and clinical outcomes in COVID-19 patients. In conclusion, we reveal a key role of platelet-mediated immunothrombosis in COVID-19 and identify distinct, clinically relevant, targetable signaling pathways that mediate this effect.

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