作者
Joseph W. Guarnieri,Michael J. Topper,Katherine Beigel,Jeff A Haltoom,Amy Chadburn,Justin Frere,Julia An,Henry Cope,Alain Borczuk,Saloni Sinha,Christine Lim,JangKeun Kim,Jiwoon Park,Cem Meydan,Jonathan Foox,Christopher Mozsary,Yaron Bram,Stephanie A Richard,Nusrat J Epsi,Brian K. Agan,Josh Chenoweth,Mark P Simons,David R. Tribble,Timothy Burgess,Clifton L. Dalgard,Mark T. Heise,Nathaniel J. Moorman,Victoria K. Baxter,Emily A. Madden,Sharon Taft-Benz,Elizabeth J. Anderson,Wes Sanders,Rebekah J. Dickmander,Gabrielle A Widjaja,Kevin A. Janssen,Timothy Lie,Deborah G. Murdock,Alessia Angelin,Yentli Soto Albrecht,Arnold Z. Olali,Joseph M. Dybas,Waldemar Priebe,Mark R. Emmett,Sonja M. Best,Margaret Johnson,Nídia Sequeira Trovão,Kevin Clark,Viktoria Zaksiene,R F Miller,Peter Grabhamr,Jonathan C. Schisler,Pedro M. Moraes‐Vieira,Simon Pollett,Christopher E. Mason,Eve Syrkin Wurtele,Deanne Taylor,Robert E. Schwartz,Afshin Beheshti,Douglas C. Wallace,Stephen B. Baylin
摘要
Abstract Lethal COVID-19 outcomes are most often attributed to classic cytokine storm and attendant excessive immune signaling. We re-visit this question using RNA sequencing in nasopharyngeal and 40 autopsy samples from COVID-19-positive and negative individuals. In nasal swabs, the top 100 genes which significantly correlated with COVID-19 viral load, include many canonical innate immune genes. However, 22 much less studied "non-canonical" genes are found and despite the absence of viral transcripts, subsets of these are upregulated in heart, lung, kidney, and liver, but not mediastinal lymph nodes. An important regulatory potential emerges for the non-canonical genes for over-activating the renin-angiotensin-activation-system (RAAS) pathway, resembling this phenomenon in hereditary angioedema (HAE) and its overlapping multiple features with lethal COVID-19 infections. Specifically, RAAS overactivation links increased fibrin deposition, leaky vessels, thrombotic tendency, and initiating the PANoptosis death pathway, as suggested in heart, lung, and especially mediastinal lymph nodes, with a tightly associated mitochondrial dysfunction linked to immune responses. For mediastinal lymph nodes, immunohistochemistry studies validate the transcriptomic findings showing abnormal architecture, excess fibrin and collagen deposition, and pathogenic fibroblasts. Further, our findings overlap findings in SARS-CoV-2 infected hamsters, C57BL/6 and BALB/c mouse models, and importantly peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) and whole blood samples from COVID-19 patients infected with early variants and later SARS-CoV-2 strains. We thus present cytokine storm in lethal COVID-19 disease as an interplay between upstream immune gene signaling producing downstream RAAS overactivation with resultant severe organ damage, especially compromising mediastinal lymph node function.