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Defective activation and regulation of type I interferon immunity is associated with increasing COVID-19 severity

Nikaïa Smith, Céline Posseme, Vincent Bondet, Jamie Sugrue, Liam Townsend, Bruno Charbit, Vincent Rouilly, Violaine Saint‐André, Tom Dott, André Rodriguez Pozo, Nader Yatim, Olivier Schwartz, Minerva Cervantes-Gonzalez, Jade Ghosn, Paul Bastard, Jean‐Laurent Casanova, Tali‐Anne Szwebel, Benjamin Terrier, Niall Conlon, Cliona O’Farrelly, Clíona Ní Cheallaigh, Nollaig M. Bourke, Darragh Duffy

2022Nature Communications69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Host immunity to infection with SARS-CoV-2 is highly variable, dictating diverse clinical outcomes ranging from asymptomatic to severe disease and death. We previously reported reduced type I interferon in severe COVID-19 patients preceded clinical worsening. Further studies identified genetic mutations in loci of the TLR3- or TLR7-dependent interferon-I pathways, or neutralizing interferon-I autoantibodies as risk factors for development of COVID-19 pneumonia. Here we show in patient cohorts with different severities of COVID-19, that baseline plasma interferon α measures differ according to the immunoassay used, timing of sampling, the interferon α subtype measured, and the presence of autoantibodies. We also show a consistently reduced induction of interferon-I proteins in hospitalized COVID-19 patients upon immune stimulation, that is not associated with detectable neutralizing autoantibodies against interferon α or interferon ω. Intracellular proteomic analysis shows increased monocyte numbers in hospitalized COVID-19 patients but impaired interferon-I response after stimulation. We confirm this by ex vivo whole blood stimulation with interferon-I which induces transcriptomic responses associated with inflammation in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, that is not seen in controls or non-hospitalized moderate cases. These results may explain the dichotomy of the poor clinical response to interferon-I based treatments in late stage COVID-19, despite the importance of interferon-I in early acute infection and may guide alternative therapeutic strategies.

Topics & Concepts

InterferonImmunologyAutoantibodyMedicineAsymptomaticImmune systemARDSVirologyAntibodyLungInternal medicineCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchLong-Term Effects of COVID-19
Defective activation and regulation of type I interferon immunity is associated with increasing COVID-19 severity | Litcius