Single-cell multiomics revealed the dynamics of antigen presentation, immune response and T cell activation in the COVID-19 positive and recovered individuals

Basic information
Cell
163,197
Sample
33

Technology
BD Rhapsody
Omics
scRNA-seq
Source
PBMCs

Dataset ID
36532041
Platform
Illumina NovaSeq 6000
Species
Human
Disease
COVID-19,Healthy
Age range
0 - 0
Update date
2022-12-02
Summary

Introduction: Despite numerous efforts to describe COVID-19's immunological landscape, there is still a gap in our understanding of the virus's infections after-effects, especially in the recovered patients. This would be important to understand as we now have huge number of global populations infected by the SARS-CoV-2 as well as variables inclusive of VOCs, reinfections, and vaccination breakthroughs. Furthermore, single-cell transcriptome alone is often insufficient to understand the complex human host immune landscape underlying differential disease severity and clinical outcome. Methods: By combining single-cell multi-omics (Whole Transcriptome Analysis plus Antibody-seq) and machine learning-based analysis, we aim to better understand the functional aspects of cellular and immunological heterogeneity in the COVID-19 positive, recovered and the healthy individuals. Results: Based on single-cell transcriptome and surface marker study of 163,197 cells (124,726 cells after data QC) from the 33 individuals (healthy=4, COVID-19 positive=16, and COVID-19 recovered=13), we observed a reduced MHC Class-I-mediated antigen presentation and dysregulated MHC Class-II-mediated antigen presentation in the COVID-19 patients, with restoration of the process in the recovered individuals. B-cell maturation process was also impaired in the positive and the recovered individuals. Importantly, we discovered that a subset of the naive T-cells from the healthy individuals were absent from the recovered individuals, suggesting a post-infection inflammatory stage. Both COVID-19 positive patients and the recovered individuals exhibited a CD40-CD40LG-mediated inflammatory response in the monocytes and T-cell subsets. T-cells, NK-cells, and monocyte-mediated elevation of immunological, stress and antiviral responses were also seen in the COVID-19 positive and the recovered individuals, along with an abnormal T-cell activation, inflammatory response, and faster cellular transition of T cell subtypes in the COVID-19 patients. Importantly, above immune findings were used for a Bayesian network model, which significantly revealed FOS, CXCL8, IL1β, CST3, PSAP, CD45 and CD74 as COVID-19 severity predictors. Discussion: In conclusion, COVID-19 recovered individuals exhibited a hyper-activated inflammatory response with the loss of B cell maturation, suggesting an impeded post-infection stage, necessitating further research to delineate the dynamic immune response associated with the COVID-19. To our knowledge this is first multi-omic study trying to understand the differential and dynamic immune response underlying the sample subtypes.

Overall design

PBMCs were isolated from Healthy (n = 4), COVID-19 (n = 16) and recovered (n = 13) individuals, using BD vaccutainers cell prepataion tubes. PBMCs were isolated as per manufacturer's recommendation, and stored for future use. Samples were multiplexed using BD single cell multiplexing kit (Human), followed by tagging with a pool of 40 oligo-attached antibody for surface markers (Ab-Seq).

Contributors

Kriti Khare†, Manish Kumar†, Pallavi Mishra†, Alok Anand†, Meghnad Joshi✉️, Tavpritesh Sethi✉️, Rajesh Pandey✉️

Contact

rajeshp@igib.in(Rajesh Pandey)

snRNA-Seq
Sample nameSample titleDiseaseGenderAgeSourceTreatmentTechnologyPlatformOmicsSample IDDataset IDAction
No data available