Dynamic changes in human single‐cell transcriptional signatures during fatal sepsis

Systemic infections, especially in patients with chronic diseases, may result in sepsis: an explosive, uncoordinated immune response that can lead to multisystem organ failure with a high mortality rate. Patients with similar clinical phenotypes or sepsis biomarker expression upon diagnosis may have...

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Published inJournal of leukocyte biology Vol. 110; no. 6; pp. 1253 - 1268
Main Authors Qiu, Xinru, Li, Jiang, Bonenfant, Jeff, Jaroszewski, Lukasz, Mittal, Aarti, Klein, Walter, Godzik, Adam, Nair, Meera G.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.12.2021
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Summary:Systemic infections, especially in patients with chronic diseases, may result in sepsis: an explosive, uncoordinated immune response that can lead to multisystem organ failure with a high mortality rate. Patients with similar clinical phenotypes or sepsis biomarker expression upon diagnosis may have different outcomes, suggesting that the dynamics of sepsis is critical in disease progression. A within‐subject study of patients with Gram‐negative bacterial sepsis with surviving and fatal outcomes was designed and single‐cell transcriptomic analyses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) collected during the critical period between sepsis diagnosis and 6 h were performed. The single‐cell observations in the study are consistent with trends from public datasets but also identify dynamic effects in individual cell subsets that change within hours. It is shown that platelet and erythroid precursor responses are drivers of fatal sepsis, with transcriptional signatures that are shared with severe COVID‐19 disease. It is also shown that hypoxic stress is a driving factor in immune and metabolic dysfunction of monocytes and erythroid precursors. Last, the data support CD52 as a prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target for sepsis as its expression dynamically increases in lymphocytes and correlates with improved sepsis outcomes. In conclusion, this study describes the first single‐cell study that analyzed short‐term temporal changes in the immune cell populations and their characteristics in surviving or fatal sepsis. Tracking temporal expression changes in specific cell types could lead to more accurate predictions of sepsis outcomes and identify molecular biomarkers and pathways that could be therapeutically controlled to improve the sepsis trajectory toward better outcomes. Graphical Single cell transcriptomics of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in surviving and fatal sepsis reveal inflammatory and metabolic pathways that change within hours of sepsis recognition.
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Present address, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA, USA
These authors contributed equally to this work
Authorship. MGN, AG, XQ, JL, JB, AM, and WK conceptualized the study. JL, XQ, AM, MGN, and AG developed the methodology. MGN, AG, XQ, JL, JB performed the investigation. MGN, AG, XQ, JL, LJ provided the formal analysis. XQ, AG, LJ, MGN wrote the article. WK, JB, and AM edited the manuscript and contributed clinical expertise. MGN and AG supervised the study.
ISSN:0741-5400
1938-3673
1938-3673
DOI:10.1002/JLB.5MA0721-825R