Epigenetic memory of coronavirus infection in innate immune cells and their progenitors
Summary
Inflammation can trigger lasting phenotypes in immune and non-immune cells. Whether and how human infections and associated inflammation can form innate immune memory in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) has remained unclear. We found that circulating HSPC, enriched from peripheral blood, captured the diversity of bone marrow HSPC, enabling investigation of their epigenomic reprogramming following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Alterations in innate immune phenotypes and epigenetic programs of HSPC persisted for months to 1 year following severe COVID-19 and were associated with distinct transcription factor (TF) activities, altered regulation of inflammatory programs, and durable increases in myelopoiesis. HSPC epigenomic alterations were conveyed, through differentiation, to progeny innate immune cells. Early activity of IL-6 contributed to these persistent phenotypes in human COVID-19 and a mouse coronavirus infection model. Epigenetic reprogramming of HSPC may underlie altered immune function following infection and be broadly relevant, especially for millions of COVID-19 survivors.
Overall design
To discover changes in chromatin post-SARS-CoV-2 infection, ATAC-seq and RNA-seq were performed on CD34+ HSPCs and CD14+ monocytes sorted from PBMC of healthy, non-COVID-19 post-ICU pateitns, mild convalescent, and severe convalescent COVID-19 patients.
Contributors
To be supplemented.
Contact
To be supplemented.
Sample name | Sample title | Disease | Gender | Age | Source | Treatment | Technology | Platform | Omics | Sample ID | Dataset ID | Action |
---|