Natural killer cell immunotypes related to COVID-19 disease severity.

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paper: Maucourant, C., Filipovic, I., Ponzetta, A., Aleman, S., Cornillet, M., Hertwig, L., ... & Björkström NK. (2020). Natural killer cell immunotypes related to COVID-19 disease severity. Science immunology, 5(50).
contributor: Niklas K. Björkström
contributor_organization: Karolinska Institutet
contributor_email: niklas.bjorkstrom@ki.se

 

    • description: Hallmarks of the NK cell immunotypes were high expression of perforin, NKG2C, and Ksp37, reflecting increased presence of adaptive NK cells in circulation of patients with severe disease.
    • exact_source: Figure 3 and 4
    • tissue: PBMC
    • immune_exposure: COVID-19 infection
    • cohort: Adults (18-70 years)
    • comparison: Moderate vs severe infection within 5 days from hospital admission
    • repository_id:
    • platform:
    • response_components:
    • response_behavior: up

 

PMID
32826343
authors
Maucourant, Christopher et al
abstract
Understanding innate immune responses in COVID-19 is important to decipher mechanisms of host responses and interpret disease pathogenesis. Natural killer (NK) cells are innate effector lymphocytes that respond to acute viral infections but might also contribute to immunopathology. Using 28-color flow cytometry, we here reveal strong NK cell activation across distinct subsets in peripheral blood of COVID-19 patients. This pattern was mirrored in scRNA-seq signatures of NK cells in bronchoalveolar lavage from COVID-19 patients. Unsupervised high-dimensional analysis of peripheral blood NK cells furthermore identified distinct NK cell immunotypes that were linked to disease severity. Hallmarks of these immunotypes were high expression of perforin, NKG2C, and Ksp37, reflecting increased presence of adaptive NK cells in circulation of patients with severe disease. Finally, arming of CD56bright NK cells was observed across COVID-19 disease states, driven by a defined protein-protein interaction network of inflammatory soluble factors. This study provides a detailed map of the NK cell activation landscape in COVID-19 disease.
status
review complete
curator
reviewer
journal
Science immunology
date review completed
year of publication
2020
In Dashboard
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