International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

Immune Response Gaps Linked to SARS-CoV-2 Infection: Cellular Exhaustion, Senescence, or Both?

  • Leonardo Vinicius Barbosa,
  • Daniele Margarita Marani Prá,
  • Seigo Nagashima,
  • Marcos Roberto Curcio Pereira,
  • Rebecca Benicio Stocco,
  • Francys de Luca Fernandes da Silva,
  • Milena Rueda Cruz,
  • Djessyka Dallagassa,
  • Thiago João Stupak,
  • George Willian Xavier da Rosa Götz,
  • Georgia Garofani Nasimoto,
  • Luiz Augusto Fanhani Cracco,
  • Isabela Busto Silva,
  • Karen Fernandes de Moura,
  • Marina de Castro Deus,
  • Ana Paula Camargo Martins,
  • Beatriz Akemi Kondo Van Spitzenbergen,
  • Andréa Novais Moreno Amaral,
  • Caroline Busatta Vaz de Paula,
  • Cleber Machado-Souza,
  • Lucia de Noronha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232213734
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 22
p. 13734

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic, promoted by the SARS-CoV-2 respiratory virus, has resulted in widespread global morbidity and mortality. The immune response against this pathogen has shown a thin line between protective effects and pathological reactions resulting from the massive release of cytokines and poor viral clearance. The latter is possibly caused by exhaustion, senescence, or both of TCD8+ cells and reduced activity of natural killer (NK) cells. The imbalance between innate and adaptive responses during the early stages of infection caused by SARS-CoV-2 contributes to the ineffective control of viral spread. The present study evaluated the tissue immunoexpression of the tissue biomarkers (Arginase-1, CCR4, CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20, CD57, CD68, CD138, IL-4, INF-α, INF-γ, iNOS, PD-1, Perforin and Sphingosine-1) to understand the cellular immune response triggered in patients who died of COVID-19. We evaluated twenty-four paraffin-embedded lung tissue samples from patients who died of COVID-19 (COVID-19 group) and compared them with ten lung tissue samples from patients who died of H1N1pdm09 (H1N1 group) with the immunohistochemical markers mentioned above. In addition, polymorphisms in the Perforin gene were genotyped through Real-Time PCR. Significantly increased tissue immunoexpression of Arginase, CD4, CD68, CD138, Perforin, Sphingosine-1, and IL-4 markers were observed in the COVID-19 group. A significantly lower immunoexpression of CD8 and CD57 was also found in this group. It is suggested that patients who died from COVID-19 had a poor cellular response concerning viral clearance and adaptive response going through tissue repair.

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