Macrophage expression and prognostic significance of the long pentraxin PTX3 in COVID-19.
Enrico BrunettaMarco FolciBarbara BottazziMaria De SantisGiuseppe GrittiAlessandro ProttiSarah N MapelliStefanos BonovasDaniele PiovaniRoberto LeoneIlaria MyVeronica ZanonGianmarco SpataMonica BacciDomenico SupinoSilvia CarnevaleMarina SironiSadaf DavoudianClelia PeanoFrancesco LandiFabiano Di MarcoFederico RaimondiAndrea GianattiClaudio AngeliniAlessandro RambaldiGarlanda CeciliaMichele CiccarelliMaurizio CecconiAlberto MantovaniPublished in: Nature immunology (2020)
Long pentraxin 3 (PTX3) is an essential component of humoral innate immunity, involved in resistance to selected pathogens and in the regulation of inflammation1-3. The present study was designed to assess the presence and significance of PTX3 in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)4-7. RNA-sequencing analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, single-cell bioinformatics analysis and immunohistochemistry of lung autopsy samples revealed that myelomonocytic cells and endothelial cells express high levels of PTX3 in patients with COVID-19. Increased plasma concentrations of PTX3 were detected in 96 patients with COVID-19. PTX3 emerged as a strong independent predictor of 28-d mortality in multivariable analysis, better than conventional markers of inflammation, in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. The prognostic significance of PTX3 abundance for mortality was confirmed in a second independent cohort (54 patients). Thus, circulating and lung myelomonocytic cells and endothelial cells are a major source of PTX3, and PTX3 plasma concentration can serve as an independent strong prognostic indicator of short-term mortality in COVID-19.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- single cell
- endothelial cells
- sars cov
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- cardiovascular events
- risk factors
- immune response
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- rna seq
- signaling pathway
- cardiovascular disease
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- antimicrobial resistance
- data analysis
- anaerobic digestion