Disruption of immune responses by type 1 diabetes exacerbates SARS-CoV-2 mediated lung injury.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY
Sara Kass-Gergi, Gan Zhao, Joanna Wong, Aaron I Weiner, Stephanie Adams Tzivelekidis, Maria E Gentile, Meryl Mendoza, Nicolas P Holcomb, Xinyuan Li, Madeline Singh, Yuru Huang, Alena Klochkova, Andrew E Vaughan
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Abstract

COVID-19 commonly presents as pneumonia, with those most severely affected progressing to respiratory failure. Patient responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection are varied, with comorbidities acting as major contributors to varied outcomes. Focusing on one such major comorbidity, we assessed whether pharmacological induction of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) would increase the severity of lung injury in a murine model of COVID-19 pneumonia utilizing wild-type mice infected with mouse-adapted SARS-CoV-2. Hyperglycemic mice exhibited increased weight loss and reduced blood oxygen saturation in comparison with their euglycemic counterparts, suggesting that these animals indeed experienced more severe lung injury. Transcriptomic analysis revealed a significant impairment of the adaptive immune response in the lungs of diabetic mice compared with those of control. To expand the limited options available for tissue analysis due to biosafety restrictions, we also employed a new technique to digest highly fixed tissue into a single-cell suspension, originally designed for scRNA-Seq, which we then adapted for flow cytometric analysis. Flow immunophenotyping and scRNA-Seq confirmed impaired recruitment of T-cells into the lungs of T1DM animals. In addition, scRNA-Seq revealed a distinct, highly inflammatory macrophage profile in the diabetic cohort that correlates with the more severe infection these mice experienced clinically, allowing insight into a possible mechanism for this phenomenon. Recognizing the near certainty that respiratory viruses will continue to present significant public health concerns for the foreseeable future, our study provides key insights into how T1DM results in a much more severe infection and identifies possible targets to ameliorate comorbidity-associated severe disease.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We define the exacerbating effects of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) on COVID-19 pneumonia severity in mice. Hyperglycemic mice experienced increased weight loss and reduced oxygen saturation. Transcriptomic analysis revealed impaired immune responses in diabetic mice, while flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing confirmed reduced T-cell recruitment and an inflammatory macrophage profile. In addition, we introduced a novel technique for tissue analysis, enabling flow cytometric analysis on highly fixed tissue samples.

I 型糖尿病对免疫反应的干扰加剧了 SARS-CoV-2 导致的肺损伤。
COVID-19 通常表现为肺炎,病情最严重者会发展为呼吸衰竭。患者对 SARS-CoV-2 感染的反应各不相同,合并症是导致不同结果的因素之一。针对其中一种主要的合并症,我们评估了在利用野生型小鼠感染小鼠适应型 SARS-CoV-2 的 COVID-19 肺炎模型中,药物诱导 I 型糖尿病 (T1DM) 是否会增加肺损伤的严重程度。与优血糖小鼠相比,高血糖小鼠表现出体重减轻和血氧饱和度降低,这表明这些动物确实经历了更严重的肺损伤。转录组分析显示,与对照组相比,糖尿病小鼠肺部的适应性免疫反应明显受损。由于生物安全性的限制,为了扩大组织分析的选择范围,我们采用了一种新技术,将高度固定的组织消化成单细胞悬液,这种技术最初是为 scRNA-Seq 设计的,后来我们将其用于流式细胞分析。流式免疫分型和 scRNA-Seq 证实,T1DM 动物肺部的 T 细胞招募功能受损。此外,scRNA-Seq 还揭示了糖尿病组群中巨噬细胞的独特、高度炎症性特征,这与这些小鼠在临床上经历的更严重感染有关,从而让我们了解了这一现象的可能机制。在可预见的未来,呼吸道病毒几乎肯定会继续引起重大的公共卫生问题,我们的研究为了解 T1DM 如何导致更严重的感染提供了重要见解,并确定了可能的靶点,以改善与并发症相关的严重疾病。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
4.10%
发文量
146
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology publishes original research covering the broad scope of molecular, cellular, and integrative aspects of normal and abnormal function of cells and components of the respiratory system. Areas of interest include conducting airways, pulmonary circulation, lung endothelial and epithelial cells, the pleura, neuroendocrine and immunologic cells in the lung, neural cells involved in control of breathing, and cells of the diaphragm and thoracic muscles. The processes to be covered in the Journal include gas-exchange, metabolic control at the cellular level, intracellular signaling, gene expression, genomics, macromolecules and their turnover, cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, cell motility, secretory mechanisms, membrane function, surfactant, matrix components, mucus and lining materials, lung defenses, macrophage function, transport of salt, water and protein, development and differentiation of the respiratory system, and response to the environment.
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