4.8 Article

A Novel Single Cell RNA-seq Analysis of Non-Myeloid Circulating Cells in Late Sepsis

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FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.696536

关键词

lymphocytes; immune cells; sepsis; transcriptome; scRNA-seq; chronic critical illness

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIGMS: R01 GM-104481, R01 GM-113945, P50 GM-111152, RM1 GM-139690-01, T32 GM-008721]
  2. NIA [1P30AG028740]

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Late after sepsis, circulating lymphoid cells show a unique transcriptomic pattern reflecting immunosuppression and low-grade inflammation, with differences identified between patients with bacterial and fungal sepsis. This highlights a potential role for precision medicine-guided immunomodulatory therapy in post-sepsis patients with chronic critical illness.
Background With the successful implementation of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines, post-sepsis in-hospital mortality to sepsis continues to decrease. Those who acutely survive surgical sepsis will either rapidly recover or develop a chronic critical illness (CCI). CCI is associated with adverse long-term outcomes and 1-year mortality. Although the pathobiology of CCI remains undefined, emerging evidence suggests a post-sepsis state of pathologic myeloid activation, inducing suboptimal lymphopoiesis and erythropoiesis, as well as downstream leukocyte dysfunction. Our goal was to use single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to perform a detailed transcriptomic analysis of lymphoid-derived leukocytes to better understand the pathology of late sepsis. Methods A mixture of whole blood myeloid-enriched and Ficoll-enriched peripheral blood mononuclear cells from four late septic patients (post-sepsis day 14-21) and five healthy subjects underwent Cellular Indexing of Transcriptomes and Epitopes by Sequencing (CITE-seq). Results We identified unique transcriptomic patterns for multiple circulating immune cell subtypes, including B- and CD4(+), CD8(+), activated CD4(+) and activated CD8(+) T-lymphocytes, as well as natural killer (NK), NKT, and plasmacytoid dendritic cells in late sepsis patients. Analysis demonstrated that the circulating lymphoid cells maintained a transcriptome reflecting immunosuppression and low-grade inflammation. We also identified transcriptomic differences between patients with bacterial versus fungal sepsis, such as greater expression of cytotoxic genes among CD8(+) T-lymphocytes in late bacterial sepsis. Conclusion Circulating non-myeloid cells display a unique transcriptomic pattern late after sepsis. Non-myeloid leukocytes in particular reveal a host endotype of inflammation, immunosuppression, and dysfunction, suggesting a role for precision medicine-guided immunomodulatory therapy.

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