DOI: 10.1111/myc.13679 ISSN: 0933-7407

Immune and metabolic perturbations in COVID‐19‐associated pulmonary mucormycosis: A transcriptome analysis of innate immune cells

Manpreet Dhaliwal, Valliappan Muthu, Arunima Sharma, Khem Raj, Shivaprakash M Rudramurthy, Ritesh Agarwal, Harsimran Kaur, Amit Rawat, Surjit Singh, Arunaloke Chakrabarti
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Dermatology
  • General Medicine

Abstract

Background and Objectives

The mechanisms underlying COVID‐19‐associated pulmonary mucormycosis (CAPM) remain unclear. We use a transcriptomic analysis of the innate immune cells to investigate the host immune and metabolic response pathways in patients with CAPM.

Patients and Methods

We enrolled subjects with CAPM (n = 5), pulmonary mucormycosis (PM) without COVID‐19 (n = 5), COVID‐19 (without mucormycosis, n = 5), healthy controls (n = 5) without comorbid illness and negative for SARS‐CoV‐2. Peripheral blood samples from cases were collected before initiating antifungal therapy, and neutrophils and monocytes were isolated. RNA sequencing was performed using Illumina HiSeqX from monocytes and neutrophils. Raw reads were aligned with HISAT‐2 pipeline and DESeq2 was used for differential gene expression. Gene ontology (GO) and metabolic pathway analysis were performed using Shiny GO application and R packages (ggplot2, Pathview).

Results

The derangement of core immune and metabolic responses in CAPM patients was noted. Pattern recognition receptors, dectin‐2, MCL, FcRγ receptors and CLEC‐2, were upregulated, but signalling pathways such as JAK–STAT, IL‐17 and CARD‐9 were downregulated; mTOR and MAP‐kinase signalling were elevated in monocytes from CAPM patients. The complement receptors, NETosis, and pro‐inflammatory responses, such as S100A8/A9, lipocalin and MMP9, were elevated. The major metabolic pathways of glucose metabolism—glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, pentose phosphate pathway, HIF signalling and iron metabolism‐ferroptosis were also upregulated in CAPM.

Conclusions

We identified significant alterations in the metabolic pathways possibly leading to cellular iron overload and a hyperglycaemic state. Immune responses revealed altered recognition, signalling, effector functions and a pro‐inflammatory state in monocytes and neutrophils from CAPM patients.

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