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Título
Disrupted resolution mechanisms favor altered phagocyte responses in COVID-19
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
COVID-19
Leukocytes
Lipid mediators
Systemic inflammation
Monocyte
Macrophage
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils activation
GPCR
Omega-3 fatty acids
Resolving
Fecha de publicación
2021-08-06
Editor
American Heart Association
Citación
Koenis, D. S., Beegun, I., Jouvene, C. C., Aguirre, G. A., Souza, P. R., Gonzalez-Nunez, M., Ly, L., Pistorius, K., Kocher, H. M., Ricketts, W., Thomas, G., Perretti, M., Alusi, G., Pfeffer, P., & Dalli, J. (2021). Disrupted Resolution Mechanisms Favor Altered Phagocyte Responses in COVID-19. Circulation Research, 129(4), E54-E71. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.319142
Resumen
[EN]Rationale: Resolution mechanisms are central in both the maintenance of homeostasis and the return to
catabasis following tissue injury and/or infections. Amongst the pro-resolving mediators, the essential fatty
acid-derived specialized pro-resolving lipid mediators (SPM) govern immune responses to limit disease
severity. Notably, little is known about the relationship between the expression and activity of SPM
pathways, circulating phagocyte function and disease severity in patients infected with novel severe acute
respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) leading to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
Objective: Herein, we investigated the link between circulating SPM concentrations and phagocyte
activation status and function in COVID-19 patients (n=39) compared to healthy (n=12) and post-COVID19 (n=8) volunteers.
Methods and Results: Lipid mediator profiling demonstrated that plasma SPM concentrations were
upregulated in patients with mild COVID-19 and are downregulated in those with severe disease. SPM
concentrations were correlated with both circulating phagocyte activation status and function. Perturbations
in plasma SPM concentrations and phagocyte activation were retained after the resolution of COVID-19
clinical symptoms. Treatment of patients with dexamethasone upregulated both the expression of SPM
biosynthetic enzymes in circulating phagocytes and plasma concentration of these mediators. Furthermore,
incubation of phagocytes from COVID-19 patients with SPM rectified their phenotype and function. This
included a downregulation in the expression of activation markers, a decrease in the Tissue Factor and
inflammatory cytokine expression, and an upregulation of bacterial phagocytosis.
Conclusions: The present findings suggest that downregulation of systemic SPM concentrations is linked
with both increased disease severity and dysregulated phagocyte function. They also identify the
upregulation of these mediators by dexamethasone as a potential mechanism in host protective activities
elicited by this drug in COVID-19 patients. Taken together, our findings elucidate a role for altered
resolution mechanisms in the disruption of phagocyte responses and the propagation of systemic
inflammation in COVID-19.
URI
ISSN
0009-7330
DOI
10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.319142
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Artículo Covid y resolución













