Author
Listed:
- Rik G. H. Lindeboom
(Wellcome Genome Campus
The Netherlands Cancer Institute)
- Kaylee B. Worlock
(University College London)
- Lisa M. Dratva
(Wellcome Genome Campus
University of Cambridge)
- Masahiro Yoshida
(University College London)
- David Scobie
(University College London)
- Helen R. Wagstaffe
(Imperial College London)
- Laura Richardson
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Anna Wilbrey-Clark
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Josephine L. Barnes
(University College London)
- Lorenz Kretschmer
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Krzysztof Polanski
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Jessica Allen-Hyttinen
(University College London)
- Puja Mehta
(University College London)
- Dinithi Sumanaweera
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Jacqueline M. Boccacino
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Waradon Sungnak
(Wellcome Genome Campus
Mahidol University)
- Rasa Elmentaite
(Wellcome Genome Campus
Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Ni Huang
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Lira Mamanova
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Rakesh Kapuge
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Liam Bolt
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Elena Prigmore
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Ben Killingley
(University College London Hospital)
- Mariya Kalinova
(hVIVO)
- Maria Mayer
(hVIVO)
- Alison Boyers
(hVIVO)
- Alex Mann
(hVIVO)
- Leo Swadling
(University College London)
- Maximillian N. J. Woodall
(UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health)
- Samuel Ellis
(UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health)
- Claire M. Smith
(UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health)
- Vitor H. Teixeira
(University College London)
- Sam M. Janes
(University College London)
- Rachel C. Chambers
(University College London)
- Muzlifah Haniffa
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Andrew Catchpole
(hVIVO)
- Robert Heyderman
(University College London)
- Mahdad Noursadeghi
(University College London)
- Benny Chain
(University College London)
- Andreas Mayer
(University College London)
- Kerstin B. Meyer
(Wellcome Genome Campus)
- Christopher Chiu
(Imperial College London)
- Marko Z. Nikolić
(University College London)
- Sarah A. Teichmann
(Wellcome Genome Campus
University of Cambridge
University of Cambridge)
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is an ongoing global health threat, yet our understanding of the dynamics of early cellular responses to this disease remains limited1. Here in our SARS-CoV-2 human challenge study, we used single-cell multi-omics profiling of nasopharyngeal swabs and blood to temporally resolve abortive, transient and sustained infections in seronegative individuals challenged with pre-Alpha SARS-CoV-2. Our analyses revealed rapid changes in cell-type proportions and dozens of highly dynamic cellular response states in epithelial and immune cells associated with specific time points and infection status. We observed that the interferon response in blood preceded the nasopharyngeal response. Moreover, nasopharyngeal immune infiltration occurred early in samples from individuals with only transient infection and later in samples from individuals with sustained infection. High expression of HLA-DQA2 before inoculation was associated with preventing sustained infection. Ciliated cells showed multiple immune responses and were most permissive for viral replication, whereas nasopharyngeal T cells and macrophages were infected non-productively. We resolved 54 T cell states, including acutely activated T cells that clonally expanded while carrying convergent SARS-CoV-2 motifs. Our new computational pipeline Cell2TCR identifies activated antigen-responding T cells based on a gene expression signature and clusters these into clonotype groups and motifs. Overall, our detailed time series data can serve as a Rosetta stone for epithelial and immune cell responses and reveals early dynamic responses associated with protection against infection.
Suggested Citation
Rik G. H. Lindeboom & Kaylee B. Worlock & Lisa M. Dratva & Masahiro Yoshida & David Scobie & Helen R. Wagstaffe & Laura Richardson & Anna Wilbrey-Clark & Josephine L. Barnes & Lorenz Kretschmer & Krzy, 2024.
"Human SARS-CoV-2 challenge uncovers local and systemic response dynamics,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 631(8019), pages 189-198, July.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:631:y:2024:i:8019:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07575-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07575-x
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