4.5 Article

Central and effector memory T cells in peripheral blood of patients with interstitial pneumonia: preliminary clues from a COVID-19 study

期刊

RESPIRATORY RESEARCH
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12931-022-02190-8

关键词

Memory T cells; Interstitial pneumonia; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; Central memory T cells; Effector memory T cells; Lymphocyte subpopulations

资金

  1. Science Committee of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan [10965164]

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Memory T cell imbalance is observed in patients with COVID-19, with an increase in central memory T cells and a decrease in effector memory T cells. Additional research is needed to confirm these findings as potential biological markers for interstitial lung involvement in viral respiratory infections.
Background SARS-CoV-2 pre-existing T-cell immune reactivity can be present in some people. A general perturbation of the main peripheral lymphocyte subsets has been described in severe COVID-19 patients, but very few studies assessed the general memory T-cell homeostasis in the acute phase of COVID-19. Here, we performed a general analysis of the main memory T cell populations in the peripheral blood of patients admitted to the hospital for a confirmed or probable COVID-19 diagnosis. Methods In this cross-sectional study, adult patients (aged >= 18 years) needing hospital admission for respiratory disease due to confirmed or probable COVID-19, were recruited before starting the therapeutic protocol for this disease. In addition to the assessment of the general lymphocyte subpopulations in the early phase of COVID-19, central memory T cells (Tm-centr cells: CD45RO+CCR7+) and effector memory T cells (Tm-eff cells: CD45RO+CCR7-) were assessed by multi-color flow cytometry, in comparison to a control group. Results During the study period, 148 study participants were recruited. Among them, 58 patients turned out positive for SARS-CoV-2 PCR (including both patients with interstitial pneumonia [PCR+Pn+] and without this complication [PCR+Pn-]), whereas the remaining 90 patients resulted to be SARS-CoV-2 PCR negative, even though all were affected with interstitial pneumonia [PCR-Pn+]. Additionally, 28 control patients without any ongoing respiratory disease were recruited. A clear unbalance in the T memory compartment emerged from this analysis on the whole pool of T cells (CD3+ cells), showing a significant increase in Tm-centr cells and, conversely, a significant decrease in Tm-eff cells in both pneumonia groups (PCR+Pn+ and PCR-Pn+) compared to the controls; PCR+Pn- group showed trends comprised between patients with pneumonia (from one side) and the control group (from the other side). This perturbation inside the memory T cell compartment was also observed in the individual analysis of the four main T cell subpopulations, based upon the differential expression of CD4 and/or CD8 markers. Conclusion Overall, we observed both absolute and relative increases of Tm-centr cells and decrease of Tm-eff cells in patients affected with interstitial pneumonia (regardless of the positive or negative results of SARS-CoV-2 PCR), compared to controls. These results need confirmation from additional research, in order to consider this finding as a potential biological marker of interstitial lung involvement in patients affected with viral respiratory infections.

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