COVID-19 PBMCs are doubly harmful, through LDN-mediated lung epithelial damage and monocytic impaired responsiveness to live Pseudomonas aeruginosa exposure

Although many studies have underscored the importance of T cells, phenotypically and functionally, fewer have studied the functions of myeloid cells in COVID disease. In particular, the potential role of myeloid cells such as monocytes and low-density neutrophils (LDNs) in innate responses and parti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in immunology 2024-05, Vol.15, p.1398369-1398369
Hauptverfasser: Gaudin, Clémence, Born-Bony, Maëlys, Villeret, Bérengère, Jaillet, Madeleine, Faille, Dorothée, Timsit, Jean-François, Tran-Dinh, Alexy, Montravers, Philippe, Crestani, Bruno, Garcia-Verdugo, Ignacio, Sallenave, Jean-Michel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although many studies have underscored the importance of T cells, phenotypically and functionally, fewer have studied the functions of myeloid cells in COVID disease. In particular, the potential role of myeloid cells such as monocytes and low-density neutrophils (LDNs) in innate responses and particular in the defense against secondary bacterial infections has been much less documented. Here, we compared, in a longitudinal study, healthy subjects, idiopathic fibrosis patients, COVID patients who were either hospitalized/moderate (M-) or admitted to ICU (COV-ICU) and patients in ICU hospitalized for other reasons (non-COV-ICU). We show that COVID patients have an increased proportion of low-density neutrophils (LDNs), which produce high levels of proteases (particularly, NE, MMP-8 and MMP-9) (unlike non-COV-ICU patients), which are partly responsible for causing type II alveolar cell damage in co-culture experiments. In addition, we showed that M- and ICU-COVID monocytes had reduced responsiveness towards further live (PAO1 strain) infection, an important pathogen colonizing COVID patients in ICU, as assessed by an impaired secretion of myeloid cytokines (IL-1, TNF, IL-8,…). By contrast, lymphoid cytokines (in particular type 2/type 3) levels remained high, both basally and post PAO1 infection, as reflected by the unimpaired capacity of T cells to proliferate, when stimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 beads. Overall, our results demonstrate that COVID circulatory T cells have a biased type 2/3 phenotype, unconducive to proper anti-viral responses and that myeloid cells have a dual deleterious phenotype, through their LDN-mediated damaging effect on alveolar cells and their impaired responsiveness (monocyte-mediated) towards bacterial pathogens such as .
ISSN:1664-3224
1664-3224
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2024.1398369