Heliyon (Jul 2021)

Bracing NK cell based therapy to relegate pulmonary inflammation in COVID-19

  • Madhan Jeyaraman,
  • Sathish Muthu,
  • Asawari Bapat,
  • Rashmi Jain,
  • E.S. Sushmitha,
  • Arun Gulati,
  • Talagavadi Channaiah Anudeep,
  • Shirodkar Jaswandi Dilip,
  • Niraj Kumar Jha,
  • Dhruv Kumar,
  • Kavindra Kumar Kesari,
  • Shreesh Ojha,
  • Sunny Dholpuria,
  • Gaurav Gupta,
  • Harish Dureja,
  • Dinesh Kumar Chellappan,
  • Sachin Kumar Singh,
  • Kamal Dua,
  • Saurabh Kumar Jha

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e07635

Abstract

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The contagiosity of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has startled mankind and has brought our lives to a standstill. The treatment focused mainly on repurposed immunomodulatory and antiviral agents along with the availability of a few vaccines for prophylaxis to vanquish COVID-19. This seemingly mandates a deeper understanding of the disease pathogenesis. This necessitates a plausible extrapolation of cell-based therapy to COVID-19 and is regarded equivalently significant. Recently, correlative pieces of clinical evidence reported a robust decline in lymphocyte count in severe COVID-19 patients that suggest dysregulated immune responses as a key element contributing to the pathophysiological alterations. The large granular lymphocytes also known as natural killer (NK) cells play a heterogeneous role in biological functioning wherein their frontline action defends the body against a wide array of infections and tumors. They prominently play a critical role in viral clearance and executing immuno-modulatory activities. Accumulated clinical evidence demonstrate a decrease in the number of NK cells in circulation with or without phenotypical exhaustion. These plausibly contribute to the progression of pulmonary inflammation in COVID-19 pneumonia and result in acute lung injury. In this review, we have outlined the present understanding of the immunological response of NK cells in COVID-19 infection. We have also discussed the possible use of these powerful biological cells as a therapeutic agent in view of preventing immunological harms of SARS-CoV-2 and the current challenges in advocating NK cell therapy for the same.

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