Literature DB >> 34009992

Incomplete Systemic Recovery and Metabolic Phenoreversion in Post-Acute-Phase Nonhospitalized COVID-19 Patients: Implications for Assessment of Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome.

Elaine Holmes1,2,3, Julien Wist1,2,4, Reika Masuda1, Samantha Lodge1,2, Philipp Nitschke1, Torben Kimhofer1,2, Ruey Leng Loo2, Sofina Begum3, Berin Boughton1,2, Rongchang Yang1, Aude-Claire Morillon1, Sung-Tong Chin1, Drew Hall1, Monique Ryan1, Sze-How Bong1, Melvin Gay5, Dale W Edgar6,7, John C Lindon8, Toby Richards9, Bu B Yeap10, Sven Pettersson11,12,13, Manfred Spraul14, Hartmut Schaefer14, Nathan G Lawler1,2, Nicola Gray1,2, Luke Whiley1,15, Jeremy K Nicholson1,2,16.   

Abstract

We present a multivariate metabotyping approach to assess the functional recovery of nonhospitalized COVID-19 patients and the possible biochemical sequelae of "Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome", colloquially known as long-COVID. Blood samples were taken from patients ca. 3 months after acute COVID-19 infection with further assessment of symptoms at 6 months. Some 57% of the patients had one or more persistent symptoms including respiratory-related symptoms like cough, dyspnea, and rhinorrhea or other nonrespiratory symptoms including chronic fatigue, anosmia, myalgia, or joint pain. Plasma samples were quantitatively analyzed for lipoproteins, glycoproteins, amino acids, biogenic amines, and tryptophan pathway intermediates using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. Metabolic data for the follow-up patients (n = 27) were compared with controls (n = 41) and hospitalized severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS-CoV-2 positive patients (n = 18, with multiple time-points). Univariate and multivariate statistics revealed variable patterns of functional recovery with many patients exhibiting residual COVID-19 biomarker signatures. Several parameters were persistently perturbed, e.g., elevated taurine (p = 3.6 × 10-3 versus controls) and reduced glutamine/glutamate ratio (p = 6.95 × 10-8 versus controls), indicative of possible liver and muscle damage and a high energy demand linked to more generalized tissue repair or immune function. Some parameters showed near-complete normalization, e.g., the plasma apolipoprotein B100/A1 ratio was similar to that of healthy controls but significantly lower (p = 4.2 × 10-3) than post-acute COVID-19 patients, reflecting partial reversion of the metabolic phenotype (phenoreversion) toward the healthy metabolic state. Plasma neopterin was normalized in all follow-up patients, indicative of a reduction in the adaptive immune activity that has been previously detected in active SARS-CoV-2 infection. Other systemic inflammatory biomarkers such as GlycA and the kynurenine/tryptophan ratio remained elevated in some, but not all, patients. Correlation analysis, principal component analysis (PCA), and orthogonal-partial least-squares discriminant analysis (O-PLS-DA) showed that the follow-up patients were, as a group, metabolically distinct from controls and partially comapped with the acute-phase patients. Significant systematic metabolic differences between asymptomatic and symptomatic follow-up patients were also observed for multiple metabolites. The overall metabolic variance of the symptomatic patients was significantly greater than that of nonsymptomatic patients for multiple parameters (χ2 p = 0.014). Thus, asymptomatic follow-up patients including those with post-acute COVID-19 Syndrome displayed a spectrum of multiple persistent biochemical pathophysiology, suggesting that the metabolic phenotyping approach may be deployed for multisystem functional assessment of individual post-acute COVID-19 patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; amino acids; biomarkers; lipoproteins; long-COVID syndrome; multiorgan disease; phenoconversion; phenoreversion; plasma; post-acute COVID-19 syndrome

Year:  2021        PMID: 34009992     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.1c00224

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Proteome Res        ISSN: 1535-3893            Impact factor:   4.466


  18 in total

Review 1.  Unbalanced IDO1/IDO2 Endothelial Expression and Skewed Keynurenine Pathway in the Pathogenesis of COVID-19 and Post-COVID-19 Pneumonia.

Authors:  Marco Chilosi; Claudio Doglioni; Claudia Ravaglia; Guido Martignoni; Gian Luca Salvagno; Giovanni Pizzolo; Vincenzo Bronte; Venerino Poletti
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-06-06

2.  Prevalence and determinants of persistent symptoms after infection with SARS-CoV-2: protocol for an observational cohort study (LongCOVID-study).

Authors:  Elizabeth N Mutubuki; Tessa van der Maaden; Ka Yin Leung; Albert Wong; Anna D Tulen; Siméon de Bruijn; Lotte Haverman; Hans Knoop; Eelco Franz; Albert Jan van Hoek; Cees C van den Wijngaard
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 3.006

3.  1H qNMR-Based Metabolomics Discrimination of Covid-19 Severity.

Authors:  Banny S B Correia; Vinicius G Ferreira; Priscila M F D Piagge; Mariana B Almeida; Nilson A Assunção; Joyce R S Raimundo; Fernando L A Fonseca; Emanuel Carrilho; Daniel R Cardoso
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 5.370

4.  Report on the 3rd Board Meeting of the International Human Phenome Consortium.

Authors:  Mei Tian; Han Liu; Shunling Chen; Zhong Yang; Weishuo Tao; Shiwen Peng; Huiting Che; Li Jin
Journal:  Phenomics       Date:  2022-06-22

5.  Mast cell activation is associated with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.

Authors:  Joshua B Wechsler; Melina Butuci; Alan Wong; Amol P Kamboj; Bradford A Youngblood
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2021-12-03       Impact factor: 14.710

Review 6.  Molecular Phenomic Approaches to Deconvolving the Systemic Effects of SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Post-acute COVID-19 Syndrome.

Authors:  Jeremy K Nicholson
Journal:  Phenomics       Date:  2021-07-22

7.  Uneven metabolic and lipidomic profiles in recovered COVID-19 patients as investigated by plasma NMR metabolomics.

Authors:  Maider Bizkarguenaga; Chiara Bruzzone; Rubén Gil-Redondo; Itxaso SanJuan; Itziar Martin-Ruiz; Diego Barriales; Ainhoa Palacios; Samuel T Pasco; Beatriz González-Valle; Ana Laín; Lara Herrera; Aida Azkarate; Miguel Angel Vesga; Cristina Eguizabal; Juan Anguita; Nieves Embade; José M Mato; Oscar Millet
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2021-10-27       Impact factor: 4.478

Review 8.  Covid-19 and Liver Injury: Role of Inflammatory Endotheliopathy, Platelet Dysfunction, and Thrombosis.

Authors:  Matthew J McConnell; Reiichiro Kondo; Nao Kawaguchi; Yasuko Iwakiri
Journal:  Hepatol Commun       Date:  2021-11-10

9.  Monoclonal Human Antibodies That Recognise the Exposed N and C Terminal Regions of the Often-Overlooked SARS-CoV-2 ORF3a Transmembrane Protein.

Authors:  Tyng Hwey Tan; Elizabeth Patton; Carol A Munro; Dora E Corzo-Leon; Andrew J Porter; Soumya Palliyil
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 5.048

10.  Identification of neurodegeneration indicators and disease progression in metachromatic leukodystrophy using quantitative NMR-based urinary metabolomics.

Authors:  Lucia Laugwitz; Laimdota Zizmare; Vidiyaah Santhanakumaran; Claire Cannet; Judith Böhringer; Jürgen G Okun; Manfred Spraul; Ingeborg Krägeloh-Mann; Samuel Groeschel; Christoph Trautwein
Journal:  JIMD Rep       Date:  2022-01-27
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