| Literature DB >> 34158670 |
Sin Man Lam1,2, Chao Zhang3, Zehua Wang1,4, Zhen Ni1,4, Shaohua Zhang1, Siyuan Yang5, Xiahe Huang1, Lesong Mo1,4, Jie Li1,4, Bernett Lee6, Mei Mei1, Lei Huang3, Ming Shi3, Zhe Xu3, Fan-Ping Meng3, Wen-Jing Cao3,7, Ming-Ju Zhou3,7, Lei Shi3, Gek Huey Chua2, Bowen Li2, Jiabao Cao4,8, Jun Wang8, Shilai Bao1,4, Yingchun Wang1,4, Jin-Wen Song9, Fujie Zhang10, Fu-Sheng Wang11, Guanghou Shui12,13.
Abstract
Exosomes represent a subtype of extracellular vesicle that is released through retrograde transport and fusion of multivesicular bodies with the plasma membrane1. Although no perfect methodologies currently exist for the high-throughput, unbiased isolation of pure plasma exosomes2,3, investigation of exosome-enriched plasma fractions of extracellular vesicles can confer a glimpse into the endocytic pathway on a systems level. Here we conduct high-coverage lipidomics with an emphasis on sterols and oxysterols, and proteomic analyses of exosome-enriched extracellular vesicles (EVs hereafter) from patients at different temporal stages of COVID-19, including the presymptomatic, hyperinflammatory, resolution and convalescent phases. Our study highlights dysregulated raft lipid metabolism that underlies changes in EV lipid membrane anisotropy that alter the exosomal localization of presenilin-1 (PS-1) in the hyperinflammatory phase. We also show in vitro that EVs from different temporal phases trigger distinct metabolic and transcriptional responses in recipient cells, including in alveolar epithelial cells, which denote the primary site of infection, and liver hepatocytes, which represent a distal secondary site. In comparison to the hyperinflammatory phase, EVs from the resolution phase induce opposing effects on eukaryotic translation and Notch signalling. Our results provide insights into cellular lipid metabolism and inter-tissue crosstalk at different stages of COVID-19 and are a resource to increase our understanding of metabolic dysregulation in COVID-19.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34158670 DOI: 10.1038/s42255-021-00425-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Metab ISSN: 2522-5812