Frontiers in Immunology (Sep 2021)

LOX-1-Expressing Immature Neutrophils Identify Critically-Ill COVID-19 Patients at Risk of Thrombotic Complications

  • Behazine Combadière,
  • Lucille Adam,
  • Noëlline Guillou,
  • Paul Quentric,
  • Paul Quentric,
  • Pierre Rosenbaum,
  • Karim Dorgham,
  • Olivia Bonduelle,
  • Christophe Parizot,
  • Christophe Parizot,
  • Delphine Sauce,
  • Julien Mayaux,
  • Charles-Edouard Luyt,
  • Charles-Edouard Luyt,
  • Alexandre Boissonnas,
  • Zahir Amoura,
  • Valérie Pourcher,
  • Makoto Miyara,
  • Makoto Miyara,
  • Guy Gorochov,
  • Guy Gorochov,
  • Amélie Guihot,
  • Amélie Guihot,
  • Christophe Combadière

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.752612
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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BackgroundLymphopenia and the neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio may have prognostic value in COVID-19 severity.ObjectiveWe investigated neutrophil subsets and functions in blood and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of COVID-19 patients on the basis of patients’ clinical characteristics.MethodsWe used a multiparametric cytometry profiling based to mature and immature neutrophil markers in 146 critical or severe COVID-19 patients.ResultsThe Discovery study (38 patients, first pandemic wave) showed that 80% of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients develop strong myelemia with CD10−CD64+ immature neutrophils (ImNs). Cellular profiling revealed three distinct neutrophil subsets expressing either the lectin‐like oxidized low‐density lipoprotein receptor‐1 (LOX‐1), the interleukin-3 receptor alpha (CD123), or programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) overrepresented in ICU patients compared to non-ICU patients. The proportion of LOX-1- or CD123-expressing ImNs is positively correlated with clinical severity, cytokine storm (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, TNFα), acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and thrombosis. BALs of patients with ARDS were highly enriched in LOX-1-expressing ImN subsets and in antimicrobial neutrophil factors. A validation study (118 patients, second pandemic wave) confirmed and strengthened the association of the proportion of ImN subsets with disease severity, invasive ventilation, and death. Only high proportions of LOX-1-expressing ImNs remained strongly associated with a high risk of severe thrombosis independently of the plasma antimicrobial neutrophil factors, suggesting an independent association of ImN markers with their functions.ConclusionLOX-1-expressing ImNs may help identifying COVID-19 patients at high risk of severity and thrombosis complications.

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