The novel contagious primary atypical pneumonia epidemic, which broke out in Wuhan,
China, in December 2019, is now formally called Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19),
with the causative virus named as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2
(SARS-CoV-2).
1,2
Recent studies have shown that in addition to dyspnea, hypoxemia, and acute respiratory
distress, lymphopenia, and cytokine release syndrome are also important clinical features
in patients with severe SARS-CoV-2 infection.
3
This suggests that homeostasis of the immune system plays an important role in the
development of COVID-19 pneumonia.
To provide direct evidence on leukocyte homeostasis, we studied the immunological
characteristics of peripheral blood leukocytes from 16 patients admitted to the Yunnan
Provincial Hospital of Infectious Diseases, Kunming, China. Among them, 10 were mild
cases, 6 were severe cases; 7 were ≥50 years old, 11 were younger; and 6 had baseline
diabetes, hypertension, or coronary atherosclerosis (Supplementary Table S1). Similar
to the healthy group (n = 6), the absolute numbers of cells of major leukocyte subsets
in peripheral blood remained at a normal level in both mild and severe patients. Different
from that reported by Chen et al.,
4
we did not observe increased neutrophils or decreased lymphocytes. Instead, we found
that the severe group had a significant reduction in granulocytes compared to the
mild group (Fig. 1a). It has been reported that elevated inflammatory mediators play
a crucial role in fatal pneumonia caused by pathogenic human coronaviruses such as
SARS and MERS (Middle East respiratory syndrome).
5
We therefore examined whether inflammatory mediators can impact progression in COVID-19
patients. However, no statistical differences in interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis
factor-α (TNF-α) plasma concentrations were found among the three groups. Although
patients had higher sCD14 levels than healthy people, there were no significant differences
between the severe and mild groups (Fig. 1b).
Fig. 1
COVID-19 patients, especially those with severe infection, showed increased levels
of regulatory molecules and decreased levels of multiple cytokines in peripheral blood
T cells. a Heat maps comparing peripheral blood leukocyte subset concentrations in
healthy (n = 6), mild (n = 10), and severe (n = 6) patients. Rainbow-colored squares
represent mean values of each group. Red-black-green squares represent log 10 P values,
and white asterisk indicates P ≤ 0.05 by post hoc ANOVA test. H, healthy; M, mild;
S, severe. b Comparisons of IL-6, TNF-α, and sCD14 plasma concentrations in healthy,
mild, and severe groups. n.s., P > 0.05, *, P ≤ 0.05, by Kruskal–Wallis test. c Comparisons
of expression levels of activation-, regulation-, and function-related molecules in
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells among groups. Rainbow-colored squares represent mean positive
cell rate for each group. d Comparisons of cell expression modules of exhaustion-related
(CTLA-4, PD-1, and TIGIT) and function-related (IFN-γ, TNFα, and IL-2) molecules in
CD4+ or CD8+ T cells among groups. “Single” indicates that cell only expresses one
of the three molecules, “Multi” indicates that cell expresses at least two of the
three molecules, “Non” indicates that cell expresses none of the three molecules.
Red-yellow-blue squares indicate average cell expression rates of different modules
of three groups, respectively. e Correlation network analysis of markers with significant
differences among groups. Nodes are colored based on cell type for three groups. Node
size indicates relative strength value according to centrality analysis. Thicker lines
indicate more correlated genes. Green lines represent significantly positive Spearman’s
correlation coefficients ≥0.40; red lines represent significantly negative Spearman’s
correlation coefficients ≤−0.40. f Hierarchical clustering of participants based on
all immunological risk indicators
Virus-induced inflammatory factor storms can cause a systemic T cell response, reflected
as changes in the differentiation and activity of T cells.
6
Here, as significant differences in virus-induced inflammatory cytokines were not
detected, we next examined whether homeostasis was perturbed in T cells at the cellular
level (Supplementary Table S2, Supplementary Fig. S1). As shown in Fig. 1c, the proportions
of multiple molecules related to T cell activation and regulation increased significantly
in patients compared to healthy controls, but several functional molecules showed
a marked decrease. Among the differentially expressed functional molecules, the levels
of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and TNF-α in CD4+ T cells were lower in the severe group than
in the mild group, whereas the levels of granzyme B and perforin in CD8+ T cells were
higher in the severe group than in the mild group. The activation molecules showed
no differences in CD4+ T cells, whereas the levels of HLA-DR and TIGIT in CD8+ T cells
were higher in the severe group than in the mild group (Fig. 1c). These data indicate
that COVID-19, similar to some chronic infections, damages the function of CD4+ T
cells and promotes excessive activation and possibly subsequent exhaustion of CD8+
T cells. Together, these perturbations of T cell subsets may eventually diminish host
antiviral immunity.
7
Usually a single molecule does not adequately predict disease progression. We therefore
further performed cluster analysis on marker expression using data obtained from flow
cytometry. Our results showed significant differences among the three subject groups
in the level of exhaustion modules, including PD-1, CTLA-4, and TIGIT, and functional
modules, including IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-2 (Supplementary Figs. S2, 3). Compared with
the healthy control and mild group, the frequency of multi-functional CD4+ T cells
(positive for at least two cytokines) decreased significantly in the severe group,
whereas the proportion of non-functional (IFN-γ−TNF-α−IL-2−) subsets increased significantly.
Studies have shown that multi-functional T cells can better control human immunodeficiency
virus in natural infection and are correlated with better outcomes during vaccination;
thus, the functional damage of CD4+ T cells may have predisposed COVID-19 patients
to severe disease.
8
Li et al.
9
showed that these multi-functional CD4+ T cells occur more frequently in patients
with severe SARS infections than in moderate infections. This indicates that SARS-CoV-2
may possess a unique immune pathology compared to other coronaviruses. In CD8+ T cells,
the frequency of the non-exhausted (PD-1−CTLA-4−TIGIT−) subset in the severe group
was significantly lower than that in the other two groups (Fig. 1d). Because functional
blockade of PD-1, CTLA-4, and TIGIT is beneficial for CD8+ T cells to maintain lasting
antigen-specific immunity and antiviral effects,
10,11
the excessive exhaustion of CD8+ T cells in severe patients may reduce their cellular
immune response to SARS-CoV-2.
To gain a comprehensive view of the above measured parameters, we also performed a
correlation network analysis, and identified variables significantly related to COVID-19
disease progression, including age, chronic ailment, loss of functional diversity
in CD4+ T cells, and increased expression of regulatory molecules, especially TIGIT,
in CD8+ T cells (Fig. 1e). Subsequent hierarchical cluster analysis showed that these
immunological factors could better distinguish healthy, mild, and severe patients,
independent of age and chronic ailment (Fig. 1f). In conclusion, our study identified
potential immunological risk factors for COVID-19 pneumonia and provided clues for
its clinical treatment.
Supplementary information
Supplementary material