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1.
EBioMedicine ; 85: 104296, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2322217

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: COVID-19 is characterized by a heterogeneous clinical presentation, ranging from mild symptoms to severe courses of disease. 9-20% of hospitalized patients with severe lung disease die from COVID-19 and a substantial number of survivors develop long-COVID. Our objective was to provide comprehensive insights into the pathophysiology of severe COVID-19 and to identify liquid biomarkers for disease severity and therapy response. METHODS: We studied a total of 85 lungs (n = 31 COVID autopsy samples; n = 7 influenza A autopsy samples; n = 18 interstitial lung disease explants; n = 24 healthy controls) using the highest resolution Synchrotron radiation-based hierarchical phase-contrast tomography, scanning electron microscopy of microvascular corrosion casts, immunohistochemistry, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry imaging, and analysis of mRNA expression and biological pathways. Plasma samples from all disease groups were used for liquid biomarker determination using ELISA. The anatomic/molecular data were analyzed as a function of patients' hospitalization time. FINDINGS: The observed patchy/mosaic appearance of COVID-19 in conventional lung imaging resulted from microvascular occlusion and secondary lobular ischemia. The length of hospitalization was associated with increased intussusceptive angiogenesis. This was associated with enhanced angiogenic, and fibrotic gene expression demonstrated by molecular profiling and metabolomic analysis. Increased plasma fibrosis markers correlated with their pulmonary tissue transcript levels and predicted disease severity. Plasma analysis confirmed distinct fibrosis biomarkers (TSP2, GDF15, IGFBP7, Pro-C3) that predicted the fatal trajectory in COVID-19. INTERPRETATION: Pulmonary severe COVID-19 is a consequence of secondary lobular microischemia and fibrotic remodelling, resulting in a distinctive form of fibrotic interstitial lung disease that contributes to long-COVID. FUNDING: This project was made possible by a number of funders. The full list can be found within the Declaration of interests / Acknowledgements section at the end of the manuscript.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Lung Diseases, Interstitial , Humans , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Lung/pathology , Lung Diseases, Interstitial/pathology , Fibrosis , Biomarkers/analysis , Ischemia/pathology , Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome
2.
Angiogenesis ; 2022 Nov 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2305635

ABSTRACT

A wide range of cardiac symptoms have been observed in COVID-19 patients, often significantly influencing the clinical outcome. While the pathophysiology of pulmonary COVID-19 manifestation has been substantially unraveled, the underlying pathomechanisms of cardiac involvement in COVID-19 are largely unknown. In this multicentre study, we performed a comprehensive analysis of heart samples from 24 autopsies with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and compared them to samples of age-matched Influenza H1N1 A (n = 16), lymphocytic non-influenza myocarditis cases (n = 8), and non-inflamed heart tissue (n = 9). We employed conventional histopathology, multiplexed immunohistochemistry (MPX), microvascular corrosion casting, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray phase-contrast tomography using synchrotron radiation, and direct multiplexed measurements of gene expression, to assess morphological and molecular changes holistically. Based on histopathology, none of the COVID-19 samples fulfilled the established diagnostic criteria of viral myocarditis. However, quantification via MPX showed a significant increase in perivascular CD11b/TIE2 + -macrophages in COVID-19 over time, which was not observed in influenza or non-SARS-CoV-2 viral myocarditis patients. Ultrastructurally, a significant increase in intussusceptive angiogenesis as well as multifocal thrombi, inapparent in conventional morphological analysis, could be demonstrated. In line with this, on a molecular level, COVID-19 hearts displayed a distinct expression pattern of genes primarily coding for factors involved in angiogenesis and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), changes not seen in any of the other patient groups. We conclude that cardiac involvement in COVID-19 is an angiocentric macrophage-driven inflammatory process, distinct from classical anti-viral inflammatory responses, and substantially underappreciated by conventional histopathologic analysis. For the first time, we have observed intussusceptive angiogenesis in cardiac tissue, which we previously identified as the linchpin of vascular remodeling in COVID-19 pneumonia, as a pathognomic sign in affected hearts. Moreover, we identified CD11b + /TIE2 + macrophages as the drivers of intussusceptive angiogenesis and set forward a putative model for the molecular regulation of vascular alterations.

3.
Cardiovasc Res ; 2022 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2256625

ABSTRACT

AIMS: SARS-CoV-2 infection causes COVID-19, which in severe cases evokes life-threatening acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Transcriptome signatures and the functional relevance of non-vascular cell types (e.g. immune and epithelial cells) in COVID-19 are becoming increasingly evident. However, despite its known contribution to vascular inflammation, recruitment/invasion of immune cells, vascular leakage and perturbed hemostasis in the lungs of severe COVID-19 patients, an in-depth interrogation of the endothelial cell (EC) compartment in lethal COVID-19 is lacking. Moreover, progressive fibrotic lung disease represents one of the complications of COVID-19 pneumonia and ARDS. Analogous features between idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and COVID-19 suggest partial similarities in their pathophysiology, yet, a head-to-head comparison of pulmonary cell transcriptomes between both conditions has not been implemented to date. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed single nucleus RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) on frozen lungs from 7 deceased COVID-19 patients, 6 IPF explant lungs and 12 controls. The vascular fraction, comprising 38,794 nuclei, could be subclustered into 14 distinct EC subtypes. Non-vascular cell types, comprising 137,746 nuclei, were subclustered and used for EC-interactome analyses. Pulmonary ECs of deceased COVID-19 patients showed an enrichment of genes involved in cellular stress, as well as signatures suggestive of dampened immunomodulation and impaired vessel wall integrity. In addition, increased abundance of a population of systemic capillary and venous ECs was identified in COVID-19 and IPF. COVID-19 systemic ECs closely resembled their IPF counterparts, and a set of 30 genes was found congruently enriched in systemic ECs across studies. Receptor-ligand interaction analysis of ECs with non-vascular cell types in the pulmonary micro-environment revealed numerous previously unknown interactions specifically enriched/depleted in COVID-19 and/or IPF. CONCLUSIONS: This study uncovered novel insights into the abundance, expression patterns and interactomes of EC subtypes in COVID-19 and IPF, relevant for future investigations into the progression and treatment of both lethal conditions. TRANSLATIONAL PERSPECTIVE: While assessing clinical and molecular characteristics of severe and lethal COVID-19 cases, the vasculature's undeniable role in disease progression has been widely acknowledged. COVID-19 lung pathology moreover shares certain clinical features with late-stage IPF - yet an in-depth interrogation and direct comparison of the endothelium at single-cell level in both conditions is still lacking. By comparing the transcriptomes of ECs from lungs of deceased COVID-19 patients to those from IPF explant and control lungs, we gathered key insights the heterogeneous composition and potential roles of ECs in both lethal diseases, which may serve as a foundation for development of novel therapeutics.

4.
Morphologie ; 106(354, Supplement):S38, 2022.
Article in French | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-1983708

ABSTRACT

Objet L’architecture capillaire et la circulation bronchique habituelle semble sensiblement modifiée dans le cadre des pneumopathies à SARS-CoV-2, associés à des thromboses multiples [1], [2]. L’imagerie en contraste de phase par source synchrotron (sPCI) permet d’étudier précisément l’ensemble des tissus organiques à une résolution microscopique et de façon non destructive. Le but de cette étude était de comparer l’anatomie vasculaire bronchique entre un poumon sain et un poumon de patients infectés par la COVID-19. Méthodes Trois poumons témoins ont été prélevés au Laboratoire d’Anatomie Des Alpes Françaises puis comparés à trois poumons de patients infectés par le SARS-CoV-2, provenant de la banque d’organe de l’Université Witten/Herdecke (Allemagne). Après préparation, les poumons ont été imagés au Synchrotron Européen de Grenoble à 26μm, 6μm et 2μm sans injection de produit de contraste [3]. La vascularisation a été étudiée sur les coupes tomodensitométriques 2D et sur les reconstructions tridimensionnelles, puis sur coupes histologiques et via des injections-corrosions. Le projet a été financé par la Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Résultats La circulation bronchique, qui provient de l’aorte thoracique et des artères intercostales, est modifiée par le processus inflammatoire et hypoxique. L’étude de l’anatomie microscopique bronchique en sPCI a permis d’établir la présence de nombreuses d’anastomoses de moins de 50μm entre la circulation bronchique et l’artère lobulaire dans les poumons de patients infectés par la COVID-19, entraînant un shunt doit-gauche intra-pulmonaire. Par ailleurs, une angiogenèse anarchique majeure a été détectée au niveau des plexus alvéolaires des zones atteintes par l’infection, au dépend des artères intra-lobulaires, par rapport aux poumons témoins. Conclusion L’imagerie sPCI réalisée a permis la première visualisation tridimensionnelle d’un shunt bronchio-pulmonaire dans la COVID-19 ainsi que les phénomènes de néovascularisations excessives associés.

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