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Memory T Cells Discrepancies in COVID-19 Patients.

Hajir A Al SaihatiHosni A M HusseinAli A ThabetAhmed A WardanySabry Younis MahmoudEman S FarragTaha I A MohamedSamah M FathyMohamed E ElnosaryAli SobhyAbdelazeem E AhmedAhmed M El-AdlyFareed S El-ShenawyAsmaa A ElsadekAmal RayanZeinab Albadry M ZahranOmnia El-BadawyMohamed G M El-NaggarMagdy M AfifiAsmaa M Zahran
Published in: Microorganisms (2023)
The immune response implicated in Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pathogenesis remains to be fully understood. The present study aimed to clarify the alterations in CD4 + and CD8 + memory T cells' compartments in SARS-CoV-2-infected patients, with an emphasis on various comorbidities affecting COVID-19 patients. Peripheral blood samples were collected from 35 COVID-19 patients, 16 recovered individuals, and 25 healthy controls, and analyzed using flow cytometry. Significant alterations were detected in the percentage of CD8 + T cells and effector memory-expressing CD45RA CD8 + T cells (TEMRA) in COVID-19 patients compared to healthy controls. Interestingly, altered percentages of CD4 + T cells, CD8 + T cells, T effector (TEff), T naïve cells (TNs), T central memory (TCM), T effector memory (TEM), T stem cell memory (TSCM), and TEMRA T cells were significantly associated with the disease severity. Male patients had more CD8 + TSCMs and CD4 + TNs cells, while female patients had a significantly higher percentage of effector CD8 + CD45RA + T cells. Moreover, altered percentages of CD8 + TNs and memory CD8 + CD45RO + T cells were detected in diabetic and non-diabetic COVID-19 patients, respectively. In summary, this study identified alterations in memory T cells among COVID-19 patients, revealing a sex bias in the percentage of memory T cells. Moreover, COVID-19 severity and comorbidities have been linked to specific subsets of T memory cells which could be used as therapeutic, diagnostic, and protective targets for severe COVID-19.
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