Inflammation and vascular remodeling in COVID-19 hearts

2022-03-08 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Inflammation and vascular remodeling in COVID-19 hearts​
Werlein, C.; Ackermann, M.; Stark, H.; Shah, H. R.; Tzankov, A.; Haslbauer, J. D. & von Stillfried, S. et al.​ (2022) 
Angiogenesis79(9) pp. 1823​-1823​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10456-022-09860-7 

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Authors
Werlein, Christopher; Ackermann, Maximilian; Stark, Helge; Shah, Harshit R.; Tzankov, Alexandar; Haslbauer, Jasmin Dinonne; von Stillfried, Saskia; Bülow, Roman David; El-Armouche, Ali; Kuenzel, Stephan; Jonigk, Danny
Abstract
A wide range of cardiac symptoms have been observed in COVID-19 patients, often significantly influencing the clinical outcome. While the pathophysiology of pulmonary COVID-19 manifestation has been substantially unraveled, the underlying pathomechanisms of cardiac involvement in COVID-19 are largely unknown. In this multicentre study, we performed a comprehensive analysis of heart samples from 24 autopsies with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and compared them to samples of age-matched Influenza H1N1 A (n= 16), lymphocytic non-influenza myocarditis cases (n= 8), and non-inflamed heart tissue (n= 9). We employed conventional histopathology, multiplexed immunohistochemistry (MPX), microvascular corrosion casting, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray phase-contrast tomography using synchrotron radiation, and direct multiplexed measurements of gene expression, to assess morphological and molecular changes holistically. Based on histopathology, none of the COVID-19 samples fulfilled the established diagnostic criteria of viral myocarditis. However, quantification via MPX showed a significant increase in perivascular CD11b/TIE2 + —macrophages in COVID-19 over time, which was not observed in influenza or non-SARS-CoV-2 viral myocarditis patients. Ultrastructurally, a significant increase in intussusceptive angiogenesis as well as multifocal thrombi, inapparent in conventional morphological analysis, could be demonstrated. In line with this, on a molecular level, COVID-19 hearts displayed a distinct expression pattern of genes primarily coding for factors involved in angiogenesis and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), changes not seen in any of the other patient groups. We conclude that cardiac involvement in COVID-19 is an angiocentric macrophage-driven inflammatory process, distinct from classical anti-viral inflammatory responses, and substantially underappreciated by conventional histopathologic analysis. For the first time, we have observed intussusceptive angiogenesis in cardiac tissue, which we previously identified as the linchpin of vascular remodeling in COVID-19 pneumonia, as a pathognomic sign in affected hearts. Moreover, we identified CD11b + /TIE2 + macrophages as the drivers of intussusceptive angiogenesis and set forward a putative model for the molecular regulation of vascular alterations.
Issue Date
8-March-2022
Journal
Angiogenesis 
Project
EXC 2067: Multiscale Bioimaging 
Organization
Institut für Röntgenphysik 
Working Group
RG Salditt (Structure of Biomolecular Assemblies and X-Ray Physics) 
External URL
https://mbexc.uni-goettingen.de/literature/publications/859
ISSN
0969-6970
eISSN
1573-7209
Language
English
Sponsor
National Institutes of Health http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000002
European Research Council
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft 501100001659
BRCCH 501100022242
DeRegCOVID
DEFEATPANDEMics
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
Medizinische Hochschule Hannover (MHH)

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