key: cord-0252204-4sv2yxsm authors: Deimel, Lachlan Paul; Li, Zheyi; Ranasinghe, Charani title: Interleukin-13 as a target to alleviate severe coronavirus disease 2019 and restore lung homeostasis date: 2021-01-27 journal: J Clin Transl Res DOI: nan sha: 693616860dd7fcce6e571eea412c30c3a108dc9d doc_id: 252204 cord_uid: 4sv2yxsm The ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic urgently requires the availability of interventions that improve outcomes for those with severe disease. Since severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection is characterized by dysregulated lung mucosae, and that mucosal homeostasis is heavily influenced by interleukin (IL)-13 activity, we explore recent findings indicating that IL-13 production is proportional to disease severity. We propose that excessive IL-13 contributes to the progression of severe/fatal COVID-19 by (1) promoting the recruitment of immune cells that express inflammatory cytokines, causing a cytokine storm that results in widespread destruction of lung tissue, (2) directly facilitating tissue-remodeling that causes airway hyperinflammation and obstruction, and (3) diverting the immune system away from developing high-quality cytotoxic T cells that confer effective anti-viral immunity. These factors may cumulatively result in significant lung distress, multi-organ failure, and death. Here, we suggest repurposing existing IL-13-inhibiting interventions, including antibody therapies routinely used for allergic lung hyperinflammation, as well as viral vector-based approaches, to alleviate disease. Since many of these strategies have previously been shown to be both safe and effective, this could prove to be a highly cost-effective solution. RELEVANCE FOR PATIENTS: There remains a desperate need to establish medical interventions that reliably improves outcomes for patients suffering from COVID-19. We explore the role of IL-13 in maintaining homeostasis at the lung mucosae and propose that its dysregulation during viral infection may propagate the hallmarks of severe disease – further exploration may provide a platform for invaluable therapeutics. Interleukin (IL)-13 is critical in maintaining mucosal homeostasis, being implicated in allergy, parasitic and viral infection, as well as vaccine-specific immunity [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] . At the lung mucosae, IL-13 is expressed by a range of innate immune cell types, particularly type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s), whose rapid response to external stimuli (pathogens, toxins, and allergens) acts to facilitate barrier tissue responses and condition downstream immune outcomes [9] [10] [11] [12] . IL-13 activity at the lung triggers smooth muscle contraction, mucus secretion, and the recruitment/activation of inflammatory immune cells. However, overexpression of IL-13 is associated with allergic lung hyperinflammation, airway tissue remodeling, and hyperresponsiveness [1, [13] [14] [15] . Interestingly, IL-13 dysregulation is known to be a hallmark of several disease conditions, including allergic pulmonary diseases, atopic dermatitis, and also some cancers [16] [17] [18] [19] . Since coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is fundamentally characterized by dysregulation of the lung mucosae, we postulate that IL-13 is associated with destructive lung hyperinflammation/immune activity that underpins severe COVID-19 disease progression. Here we discuss how IL-13inhibiting interventions could be repurposed to benefit severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2)-infected patients. By studying a series of viruses, we have recently shown that ILC2s produce significant IL-13 following viral infection/ vaccination 24 h post-encounter [10] , where the level of ILC2-derived IL-13 is dependent on the virus (e.g., fowlpox