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Differential chromatin accessibility in peripheral blood mononuclear cells underlies COVID-19 disease severity prior to seroconversion.

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Date
2022-04-07
Authors
Giroux, Nicholas S
Ding, Shengli
McClain, Micah T
Burke, Thomas W
Petzold, Elizabeth
Chung, Hong A
Rivera, Grecia O
Wang, Ergang
Xi, Rui
Bose, Shree
Rotstein, Tomer
Nicholson, Bradly P
Chen, Tianyi
Henao, Ricardo
Sempowski, Gregory D
Denny, Thomas N
De Ussel, Maria Iglesias
Satterwhite, Lisa L
Ko, Emily R
Ginsburg, Geoffrey S
Kraft, Bryan D
Tsalik, Ephraim L
Shen, Xiling
Woods, Christopher
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Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 infection triggers profound and variable immune responses in human hosts. Chromatin remodeling has been observed in individuals severely ill or convalescing with COVID-19, but chromatin remodeling early in disease prior to anti-spike protein IgG seroconversion has not been defined. We performed the Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq) and RNA-seq on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from outpatients with mild or moderate symptom severity at different stages of clinical illness. Early in the disease course prior to IgG seroconversion, modifications in chromatin accessibility associate with mild or moderate symptoms are already robust and include severity-associated changes in accessibility of genes in interleukin signaling, regulation of cell differentiation and cell morphology. Furthermore, single-cell analyses revealed evolution of the chromatin accessibility landscape and transcription factor motif accessibility for individual PBMC cell types over time. The most extensive remodeling occurred in CD14+ monocytes, where sub-populations with distinct chromatin accessibility profiles were observed prior to seroconversion. Mild symptom severity is marked by upregulation classical antiviral pathways including those regulating IRF1 and IRF7, whereas in moderate disease these classical antiviral signals diminish suggesting dysregulated and less effective responses. Together, these observations offer novel insight into the epigenome of early mild SARS-CoV-2 infection and suggest that detection of chromatin remodeling in early disease may offer promise for a new class of diagnostic tools for COVID-19.
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Journal article
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25000
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.21203/rs.3.rs-1479864/v1
Publication Info
Giroux, Nicholas S; Ding, Shengli; McClain, Micah T; Burke, Thomas W; Petzold, Elizabeth; Chung, Hong A; ... Woods, Christopher (2022). Differential chromatin accessibility in peripheral blood mononuclear cells underlies COVID-19 disease severity prior to seroconversion. Res Sq. 10.21203/rs.3.rs-1479864/v1. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25000.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Kraft

Bryan David Kraft

Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine
Dr. Kraft has a wide variety of clinical and research interests, including sepsis, pneumonia, and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and has special expertise in rare lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis and pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP). PAP can be congenital, hereditary, autoimmune, or due to occupational exposures (e.g. dusts, fibers, silica). Dr. Kraft performs whole lung lavage (WLL) at Duke in a state-of-the art hyperbaric chamber within the Duke C
Sempowski

Gregory David Sempowski

Professor in Medicine
Dr. Sempowski earned his PhD in Immunology from the University of Rochester and was specifically trained in the areas of inflammation, wound healing, and host response (innate and adaptive).  Dr. Sempowski contributed substantially to the field of lung inflammation and fibrosis defining the roles of pulmonary fibroblast heterogeneity and CD40/CD40L signaling in regulating normal and pathogenic lung inflammation.  During his postdoctoral training with Dr. Barton F. H
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