Persistent SARS-CoV-2 Spike is Associated with Localized Immune Dysregulation in Long COVID Gut Biopsies
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Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 persistence is a proposed driver of Long COVID (LC), but the in-situ relationship between residual viral antigen and immune dysregulation remains poorly defined. To address this critical gap, we employed a high-resolution, multi-modal approach—combining RNAscope, GeoMx Digital Spatial Profiling (DSP), spatial transcriptomics, and multiplex immunofluorescence—on 25 terminal ileum and left colon biopsies from a clinical cohort of 8 LC participants and 5 healthy controls.
We confirmed the persistence of SARS-CoV-2 Spike transcript and protein in the gut tissue of all LC cases and controls tested. Yet, comparison of Spike-positive (Spike+) regions in LC versus healthy control colon tissues revealed a differential, symptomatic state-associated signature, with 57 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) (26 upregulated, 31 downregulated), revealing genes that disrupt the immune response in LC subjects.
LC colon Spike+ regions demonstrated increased expression of AQP8 and other absorptive-related genes (SLC26A3, SLC26A2, and CLCA4) which are involved with Crohn′s disease along with transcripts involved in tumorigenesis (GUCA2A, S100P, TSPAN1). Simultaneous downregulation of key homeostatic chemokines (CXCL13, CCL19, CCL21), and other transcripts reported to exhibit low expression in colorectal cancers (TMEM88B, NIBAN3, DMBT1), suggesting a paradox of epithelial tissue stress yet dysfunctional immune trafficking. Further analysis comparing Spike+ versus Spike- regions within LC colon tissue demonstrated an active, localized, antigen-driven immune microenvironment, identifying 122 DEGs (82 upregulated, 40 downregulated), including tumorigenesis genes.
Cellular deconvolution of Spike+ regions revealed a statistically significant focal enrichment of myeloid-derived cells (macrophages, non-classical/intermediate monocytes), plasma cells, and regulatory T cells, coupled with significant enrichment in T-cell-related pathways, including ″Antigen processing and presentation,″ and ″Th1/Th2/Th17 cell differentiation″. The ileum displayed a similar, though less pronounced, signature, demonstrating these statistically significant findings are specific to the colon of LC subjects.
In contrast, corresponding Spike+ vs. Spike- analysis in healthy control colon tissues showed a more modest transcriptional response with 38 DEGs.
Our data provide robust evidence that persistent SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein detection in the gut is not immunologically inert. Instead, it is actively associated with distinct, immune cell composition shifts and a dysfunctional pro-inflammatory transcriptional profile, supporting the hypothesis that retained viral antigen drives chronic immune dysregulation in tissue of Long COVID subjects.
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Abraham Soria, Salim; Peterson, Patrick; VanElzakker, Michael B; Tankelevich, Michael; Mehandru, Saurabh; Proal, Amy; Putrino, David; Freire, Marcelo
[Line breaks added]
Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 persistence is a proposed driver of Long COVID (LC), but the in-situ relationship between residual viral antigen and immune dysregulation remains poorly defined. To address this critical gap, we employed a high-resolution, multi-modal approach—combining RNAscope, GeoMx Digital Spatial Profiling (DSP), spatial transcriptomics, and multiplex immunofluorescence—on 25 terminal ileum and left colon biopsies from a clinical cohort of 8 LC participants and 5 healthy controls.
We confirmed the persistence of SARS-CoV-2 Spike transcript and protein in the gut tissue of all LC cases and controls tested. Yet, comparison of Spike-positive (Spike+) regions in LC versus healthy control colon tissues revealed a differential, symptomatic state-associated signature, with 57 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) (26 upregulated, 31 downregulated), revealing genes that disrupt the immune response in LC subjects.
LC colon Spike+ regions demonstrated increased expression of AQP8 and other absorptive-related genes (SLC26A3, SLC26A2, and CLCA4) which are involved with Crohn′s disease along with transcripts involved in tumorigenesis (GUCA2A, S100P, TSPAN1). Simultaneous downregulation of key homeostatic chemokines (CXCL13, CCL19, CCL21), and other transcripts reported to exhibit low expression in colorectal cancers (TMEM88B, NIBAN3, DMBT1), suggesting a paradox of epithelial tissue stress yet dysfunctional immune trafficking. Further analysis comparing Spike+ versus Spike- regions within LC colon tissue demonstrated an active, localized, antigen-driven immune microenvironment, identifying 122 DEGs (82 upregulated, 40 downregulated), including tumorigenesis genes.
Cellular deconvolution of Spike+ regions revealed a statistically significant focal enrichment of myeloid-derived cells (macrophages, non-classical/intermediate monocytes), plasma cells, and regulatory T cells, coupled with significant enrichment in T-cell-related pathways, including ″Antigen processing and presentation,″ and ″Th1/Th2/Th17 cell differentiation″. The ileum displayed a similar, though less pronounced, signature, demonstrating these statistically significant findings are specific to the colon of LC subjects.
In contrast, corresponding Spike+ vs. Spike- analysis in healthy control colon tissues showed a more modest transcriptional response with 38 DEGs.
Our data provide robust evidence that persistent SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein detection in the gut is not immunologically inert. Instead, it is actively associated with distinct, immune cell composition shifts and a dysfunctional pro-inflammatory transcriptional profile, supporting the hypothesis that retained viral antigen drives chronic immune dysregulation in tissue of Long COVID subjects.
Web | DOI | PDF | bioRxiv | Preprint