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ssrn; 2021.
Preprint in English | PREPRINT-SSRN | ID: ppzbmed-10.2139.ssrn.3945023

ABSTRACT

Clinical and hyperinflammatory overlap between COVID-19 and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) has been reported. However, the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Here we show that COVID-19 and HLH have an overlap of signaling pathways and gene signatures commonly dysregulated, which were defined by investigating the transcriptomes of 1253 subjects (controls, COVID-19, and HLH patients) using microarray, bulk RNA-sequencing (RNAseq), and single-cell RNAseq (scRNAseq). COVID-19 and HLH share pathways involved in cytokine and chemokine signaling as well as neutrophil-mediated immune responses that associate with COVID-19 severity. These genes are dysregulated at protein level across several COVID-19 studies and form an interconnected network with differentially expressed plasma proteins which converge to neutrophil hyperactivation in COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit. scRNAseq analysis indicated that these genes are specifically upregulated across different leukocyte populations, including lymphocyte subsets and immature neutrophils. Artificial intelligence modeling confirmed the strong association of these genes with COVID-19 severity. Thus, our work indicates putative therapeutic pathways for intervention.Funding: We acknowledge the Latin American Society of Immunodeficiencies (LASID) for providing the research funding of LFS (LASID Fellowship award 2020), and the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP grants 2018/18886-9, 2020/01688-0, and 2020/07069-0 to OCM) for financial support. Computational analysis was supported by FAPESP and partially by the grants from Ontario Research Fund (#34876), Natural Sciences Research Council (NSERC #203475), Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI #29272, #225404, #33536), and IBM granted to IJ, the National Institutes of Health (NHLBI) through award HL130704 granted to AJ, as well as the NIH P4 GM108538 granted to KAO and JJC. This study was financed in part by the coordination for the improvement of higher education personnel – Brazil (CAPES) – finance code 001.Declaration of Interests: The authors have declared that no conflict of interest exists.


Subject(s)
Smear Layer , Lymphohistiocytosis, Hemophagocytic , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes , COVID-19
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