作者
Ryan Thompson,Nicole W. Simons,Lillian Wilkins,Esther Cheng,Diane Marie Del Valle,Gabriel E. Hoffman,Carlo Cervia,Brian Fennessy,Konstantinos Mouskas,Nancy J Francoeur,Jessica S Johnson,Lauren Lepow,Jessica Le Berichel,Christie Chang,Aviva G Beckmann,Ying-Chih Wang,Kai Nie,Nicholas Zaki,Kevin Tuballes,Vanessa Barcessat,Mario A Cedillo,Dan Yuan,Laura M. Huckins,Panos Roussos,Thomas U. Marron,Benjamin S. Glicksberg,Girish N. Nadkarni,James R Heath,Edgar Kozlova,Onur Boyman,Seunghee Kim-Schulze,Robert Sebra,Miriam Merad,Sacha Gnjatic,Eric E. Schadt,Alexander W. Charney,Noam D. Beckmann
摘要
Abstract Post-acute sequelae of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection are debilitating, clinically heterogeneous and of unknown molecular etiology. A transcriptome-wide investigation was performed in 165 acutely infected hospitalized individuals who were followed clinically into the post-acute period. Distinct gene expression signatures of post-acute sequelae were already present in whole blood during acute infection, with innate and adaptive immune cells implicated in different symptoms. Two clusters of sequelae exhibited divergent plasma-cell-associated gene expression patterns. In one cluster, sequelae associated with higher expression of immunoglobulin-related genes in an anti-spike antibody titer-dependent manner. In the other, sequelae associated independently of these titers with lower expression of immunoglobulin-related genes, indicating lower non-specific antibody production in individuals with these sequelae. This relationship between lower total immunoglobulins and sequelae was validated in an external cohort. Altogether, multiple etiologies of post-acute sequelae were already detectable during SARS-CoV-2 infection, directly linking these sequelae with the acute host response to the virus and providing early insights into their development.