Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) represent an emerging global crisis. However, quantifiable risk-factors for PASC and their biological associations are poorly resolved. We executed a deep multi-omic, longitudinal investigation of 309 COVID-19 patients from initial diagnosis to convalescence (2-3 months later), integrated with clinical data, and patient-reported symptoms. We resolved four PASC-anticipating risk factors at the time of initial COVID-19 diagnosis: type 2 diabetes, SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia, Epstein-Barr virus viremia, and specific autoantibodies. In patients with gastrointestinal PASC, SARS-CoV-2-specific and CMV-specific CD8 + T cells exhibited unique dynamics during recovery from COVID-19. Analysis of symptom-associated immunological signatures revealed coordinated immunity polarization into four endotypes exhibiting divergent acute severity and PASC. We find that immunological associations between PASC factors diminish over time leading to distinct convalescent immune states. Detectability of most PASC factors at COVID-19 diagnosis emphasizes the importance of early disease measurements for understanding emergent chronic conditions and suggests PASC treatment strategies.
We present an integrated analysis of the clinical measurements, immune cells and plasma multi-omics of 139 COVID-19 patients representing all levels of disease severity, from serial blood draws collected during the first week of infection following diagnosis. We identify a major shift between mild and moderate disease, at which point elevated inflammatory signaling is accompanied by the loss of specific classes of metabolites and metabolic processes. Within this stressed plasma environment at moderate disease, multiple unusual immune cell phenotypes emerge and amplify with increasing disease severity. We condensed over 120,000 immune features into a single axis to capture how different immune cell classes coordinate in response to SARS-CoV-2. This immune-response axis independently aligns with the major plasma composition changes, with clinical metrics of blood clotting, and with the sharp transition between mild and moderate disease. This study suggests that moderate disease may provide the most effective setting for therapeutic intervention.
Graft versus host disease (GVHD), mediated by donor T cells, is a significant source of morbidity and mortality following allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) can successfully treat ongoing graft versus host disease, presumably due to their ability to suppress donor T cell proliferation. Little is known about the potential of MSC to prevent GVHD. Here we show that bone marrow-isolated MSC can suppress the development of GVHD if given after donor T cell recognition of antigen. IFN-c was required to initiate MSC efficacy. Recipients of IFN-c -/-T cells did not respond to MSC treatment and succumbed to GVHD. MSC, pre-treated with IFN-c, became immediately active and could suppress GVHD more efficiently than a fivefold-greater number of MSC that were not activated. When given at the time of bone marrow transplantation, activated MSC could prevent GVHD mortality (100% survival, p=0.006). MSC activation was dependent on the magnitude of IFN-c exposure, with increased IFN-c exposure leading to increased MSC suppression of GVHD. Activated MSC present a new strategy for preventing GVHD using fewer MSC. Key words: Mesenchymal stem cell Á GVH disease Á IFN-c See accompanying commentary by Dazzi and Marelli-Berg IntroductionAllogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants have the potential to play a significant curative role in the treatment of malignant and non-malignant hematopoietic disorders, autoimmune diseases, and immunological deficiencies, and in the induction of transplantation tolerance [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]. Widespread application of this therapeutic modality is limited due to the morbidity and mortality of graft versus host disease (GVHD), which affects 50% of stem cell transplant recipients [11][12][13][14][15][16]. While grafts highly matched to the recipient, young donors, donor/recipient sex match, and posttransplant immunosuppression are strategies used to reduce the risk of GVHD [17], thus far, the greatest preventative measure has been intentional underutilization of stem cell transplantation. Theoretically, strategies aimed at preventing GVHD would target early initiating factors either during the inflammatory milieu created in the wake of tissue damage from conditioning regimens [18,19] or during T cell antigen recognition and proliferation [20,21]. Once the efferent effector phase occurs, donor T cell-mediated destruction of host tissues occurs and preventive strategies are replaced with treatment regimens [19].Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) have been used in the efferent phase of GVHD to successfully treat ongoing, acute, steroidresistant GVHD [22,23]. In contrast, when given at the time of BM transplant, for the prevention of GVHD, the incidence of grade III/ IV GVHD was not significantly improved [24], suggesting the [26,27,29,30]. In addition, MSC do not suppress the modest T cell proliferative response to recall antigens [31]. These findings suggest MSC may exert their optimal effects during the events surrounding larger scale T cell activation and proliferat...
Variation in the human gut microbiome can reflect host lifestyle and behaviors and influence disease biomarker levels in the blood. Understanding the relationships between gut microbes and host phenotypes are critical for understanding wellness and disease. Here, we examine associations between the gut microbiota and ~150 host phenotypic features across ~3,400 individuals. We identify major axes of taxonomic variance in the gut and a putative diversity maximum along the Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes axis. Our analyses reveal both known and unknown associations between microbiome composition and host clinical markers and lifestyle factors, including host-microbe associations that are composition-specific. These results suggest potential opportunities for targeted interventions that alter the composition of the microbiome to improve host health. By uncovering the interrelationships between host diet and lifestyle factors, clinical blood markers, and the human gut microbiome at the population-scale, our results serve as a roadmap for future studies on host-microbe interactions and interventions.
A better understanding of the metabolic alterations in immune cells during severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection may elucidate the wide diversity of clinical symptoms experienced by individuals with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Here, we report the metabolic changes associated with the peripheral immune response of 198 individuals with COVID-19 through an integrated analysis of plasma metabolite and protein levels as well as single-cell multiomics analyses from serial blood draws collected during the first week after clinical diagnosis. We document the emergence of rare but metabolically dominant T cell subpopulations and find that increasing disease severity correlates with a bifurcation of monocytes into two metabolically distinct subsets. This integrated analysis reveals a robust interplay between plasma metabolites and cell-type-specific metabolic reprogramming networks that is associated with disease severity and could predict survival.
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