The pulmonary vasculature in lethal COVID-19 and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis at single-cell resolution
Cardiovascular Research

Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 infection causes COVID-19, which in severe cases evokes life-threatening acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Transcriptome signatures and the functional relevance of non-vascular cell types (e.g. immune and epithelial cells) in COVID-19 are becoming increasingly evident. However, despite its known contribution to vascular inflammation, recruitment/invasion of immune cells, vascular leakage, and perturbed haemostasis in the lungs of severe COVID-19 patients, an in-depth interrogation of the endothelial cell (EC) compartment in lethal COVID-19 is lacking. Moreover, progressive fibrotic lung disease represents one of the complications of COVID-19 pneumonia and ARDS. Analogous features between idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and COVID-19 suggest partial similarities in their pathophysiology, yet, a head-to-head comparison of pulmonary cell transcriptomes between both conditions has not been implemented to date.
We performed single-nucleus RNA-sequencing on frozen lungs from 7 deceased COVID-19 patients, 6 IPF explant lungs, and 12 controls. The vascular fraction, comprising 38 794 nuclei, could be subclustered into 14 distinct EC subtypes. Non-vascular cell types, comprising 137 746 nuclei, were subclustered and used for EC-interactome analyses. Pulmonary ECs of deceased COVID-19 patients showed an enrichment of genes involved in cellular stress, as well as signatures suggestive of dampened immunomodulation and impaired vessel wall integrity. In addition, increased abundance of a population of systemic capillary and venous ECs was identified in COVID-19 and IPF. COVID-19 systemic ECs closely resembled their IPF counterparts, and a set of 30 genes was found congruently enriched in systemic ECs across studies. Receptor–ligand interaction analysis of ECs with non-vascular cell types in the pulmonary micro-environment revealed numerous previously unknown interactions specifically enriched/depleted in COVID-19 and/or IPF.
This study uncovered novel insights into the abundance, expression patterns, and interactomes of EC subtypes in COVID-19 and IPF, relevant for future investigations into the progression and treatment of both lethal conditions.
Contributors

Stijn Verleden
Author

Laurens Liesenborghs
Author

Anna K Stalder
Author

Sasha Libbrecht
Author

Tina Van Buyten
Author

Gino Philips
Author

Laura P M H de Rooij
Author

Abhishek Subramanian
Author

Lisa M Becker
Author

Laure-Anne Teuwen
Author

Sébastien J Dumas
Author

Bram Boeckx
Author

Sander Jansen
Author

Elda Meta
Author

Mila Borri
Author

Simon Feys
Author

Liliana Sokol
Author

Amélie Dendooven
Author

Anh-Co K Truong
Author

Jan Gunst
Author

Pierre Van Mol
Author

Jasmin D Haslbauer
Author

Katerina Rohlenova
Author

Thomas Menter
Author

Robbert Boudewijns
Author

Vincent Geldhof
Author

Stefan Vinckier
Author

Jacob Amersfoort
Author

Wim Wuyts
Author

Dirk Van Raemdonck
Author

Werner Jacobs
Author

Laurens J Ceulemans
Author

Birgit Weynand
Author

Bernard Thienpont
Author

Martin Lammens
Author

Mark Kuehnel
Author

Guy Eelen
Author

Mieke Dewerchin
Author

Luc Schoonjans
Author

Danny Jonigk
Author

Jo van Dorpe
Author

Alexandar Tzankov
Author

Els Wauters
Author

Massimiliano Mazzone
Author

Johan Neyts
Author

Joost Wauters
Author

Diether Lambrechts
Author

Peter Carmeliet
Author
