Dysregulation of brain and choroid plexus cell types in severe COVID-19

Although SARS-CoV-2 primarily targets the respiratory system, patients with and survivors of COVID-19 can suffer neurological symptoms 1 – 3 . However, an unbiased understanding of the cellular and molecular processes that are affected in the brains of patients with COVID-19 is missing. Here we prof...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2021-07, Vol.595 (7868), p.565-571
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Andrew C., Kern, Fabian, Losada, Patricia M., Agam, Maayan R., Maat, Christina A., Schmartz, Georges P., Fehlmann, Tobias, Stein, Julian A., Schaum, Nicholas, Lee, Davis P., Calcuttawala, Kruti, Vest, Ryan T., Berdnik, Daniela, Lu, Nannan, Hahn, Oliver, Gate, David, McNerney, M. Windy, Channappa, Divya, Cobos, Inma, Ludwig, Nicole, Schulz-Schaeffer, Walter J., Keller, Andreas, Wyss-Coray, Tony
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although SARS-CoV-2 primarily targets the respiratory system, patients with and survivors of COVID-19 can suffer neurological symptoms 1 – 3 . However, an unbiased understanding of the cellular and molecular processes that are affected in the brains of patients with COVID-19 is missing. Here we profile 65,309 single-nucleus transcriptomes from 30 frontal cortex and choroid plexus samples across 14 control individuals (including 1 patient with terminal influenza) and 8 patients with COVID-19. Although our systematic analysis yields no molecular traces of SARS-CoV-2 in the brain, we observe broad cellular perturbations indicating that barrier cells of the choroid plexus sense and relay peripheral inflammation into the brain and show that peripheral T cells infiltrate the parenchyma. We discover microglia and astrocyte subpopulations associated with COVID-19 that share features with pathological cell states that have previously been reported in human neurodegenerative disease 4 – 6 . Synaptic signalling of upper-layer excitatory neurons—which are evolutionarily expanded in humans 7 and linked to cognitive function 8 —is preferentially affected in COVID-19. Across cell types, perturbations associated with COVID-19 overlap with those found in chronic brain disorders and reside in genetic variants associated with cognition, schizophrenia and depression. Our findings and public dataset provide a molecular framework to understand current observations of COVID-19-related neurological disease, and any such disease that may emerge at a later date. Single-nucleus transcriptomes of frontal cortex and choroid plexus samples from patients with COVID-19 reveal pathological cell states that are similar to those associated with human neurodegenerative diseases and chronic brain disorders.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-021-03710-0