Naoki Kaneko,Julie Boucau,Hsiao-Hsuan Kuo,Cory A. Perugino,Vinay S. Mahajan,Jocelyn R. Farmer,Hang Liu,Thomas Diefenbach,Alicja Piechocka‐Trocha,Kristina Lefteri,Michael T. Waring,Katherine R. Premo,Bruce D. Walker,Jonathan Z. Li,Gaurav D. Gaiha,Xu G. Yu,Mathias Lichterfeld,Robert F. Padera,Shiv Pillai
Many studies have been performed in severe COVID-19 on immune cells in the circulation and on cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage. Most studies have tended to provide relative information rather than a quantitative view, and it is a combination of approaches by various groups that is helping the field build a picture of the mechanisms that drive severe lung disease. Approaches employed to date have not revealed information on lung parenchymal T cell subsets in severe COVID-19. Therefore, we sought to examine early and late T cell subset alterations in the lungs and draining lymph nodes in severe COVID-19 using a rapid autopsy protocol and quantitative imaging approaches. Here, we have established that cytotoxic CD4+ T cells (CD4 + CTLs) increase in the lungs, draining lymph nodes and blood as COVID-19 progresses. CD4 + CTLs are prominently expanded in the lung parenchyma in severe COVID-19. In contrast CD8+ T cells are not prominent, exhibit increased PD-1 expression, and no obvious increase is seen in the number of Granzyme B+ CD8+ T cells in the lung parenchyma in severe COVID-19. Based on quantitative evidence for re-activation in the lung milieu, CD4 + CTLs may be as likely to drive viral clearance as CD8+ T cells and may also be contributors to lung inflammation and eventually to fibrosis in severe COVID-19.