Although most causes of death and morbidity in premature infants are related to immune maladaptation, the premature immune system remains poorly understood. We provide a comprehensive single-cell depiction of the neonatal immune system at birth across the spectrum of viable gestational age (GA), ranging from 25 weeks to term. A mass cytometry immunoassay interrogated all major immune cell subsets, including signaling activity and responsiveness to stimulation. An elastic net model described the relationship between GA and immunome (R=0.85, p=8.75e-14), and unsupervised clustering highlighted previously unrecognized GA-dependent immune dynamics, including decreasing basal MAP-kinase/NFκB signaling in antigen presenting cells; increasing responsiveness of cytotoxic lymphocytes to interferon-α; and decreasing frequency of regulatory and invariant T cells, including NKT-like cells and CD8+CD161+ T cells. Knowledge gained from the analysis of the neonatal immune landscape across GA provides a mechanistic framework to understand the unique susceptibility of preterm infants to both hyper-inflammatory diseases and infections.
Keywords: Neonatal immunology; neonatal NK cells; neonatal T cells; neonatal antigen presenting cells; neonatal cytotoxic cells; prematurity.
Copyright © 2021 Peterson, Hedou, Ganio, Stelzer, Feyaerts, Harbert, Adusumelli, Ando, Tsai, Tsai, Han, Ringle, Houghteling, Reiss, Lewis, Winn, Angst, Aghaeepour, Stevenson and Gaudilliere.