Single-cell immune profiling reveals markers of emergency myelopoiesis that distinguish severe from mild respiratory syncytial virus disease in infants
Publication date
2023-12
Authors
RESCEU Investigators
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Whereas most infants infected with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) show no or only mild symptoms, an estimated 3 million children under five are hospitalized annually due to RSV disease. This study aimed to investigate biological mechanisms and associated biomarkers underlying RSV disease heterogeneity in young infants, enabling the potential to objectively categorize RSV-infected infants according to their medical needs. Immunophenotypic and functional profiling demonstrated the emergence of immature and progenitor-like neutrophils, proliferative monocytes (HLA-DR Low , Ki67+), impaired antigen-presenting function, downregulation of T cell response and low abundance of HLA-DR Low B cells in severe RSV disease. HLA-DR Low monocytes were found as a hallmark of RSV-infected infants requiring hospitalization. Complementary transcriptomics identified genes associated with disease severity and pointed to the emergency myelopoiesis response. These results shed new light on mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis and development of severe RSV disease and identified potential new candidate biomarkers for patient stratification.
Keywords
Infant, Child, Humans, Myelopoiesis/genetics, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections/diagnosis, Respiratory Syncytial Viruses, HLA-DR Antigens, Biomarkers, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Citation
RESCEU Investigators 2023, 'Single-cell immune profiling reveals markers of emergency myelopoiesis that distinguish severe from mild respiratory syncytial virus disease in infants', Clinical and Translational Medicine [E], vol. 13, no. 12, pp. e1507. https://doi.org/10.1002/ctm2.1507