| Literature DB >> 34307358 |
Marjan Nouri-Keshtkar1,2, Sara Taghizadeh3,4, Aisan Farhadi1,2, Aysan Ezaddoustdar5, Samira Vesali6, Roya Hosseini6, Mehdi Totonchi2,7, Azam Kouhkan2,6, Chengshui Chen3, Jin-San Zhang3, Saverio Bellusci3,4, Yaser Tahamtani1,2,6.
Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), a new emerging respiratory virus, caused evolving pneumonia outbreak around the world. In SARS-Cov-2 infected patients, diabetes mellitus (DM) and obesity are two metabolic diseases associated with higher severity of SARS-CoV-2 related complications, characterized by acute lung injury requiring assisted ventilation as well as fibrosis development in surviving patients. Different factors are potentially responsible for this exacerbated response to SARS-CoV-2 infection. In patients with DM, base-line increase in inflammation and oxidative stress represent preexisting risk factors for virus-induced damages. Such factors are also likely to be found in obese patients. In addition, it has been proposed that massive injury to the alveolar epithelial type 2 (AT2) cells, which express the SARS-CoV-2 receptor angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), leads to the activation of their stromal niches represented by the Lipofibroblasts (LIF). LIF are instrumental in maintaining the self-renewal of AT2 stem cells. LIF have been proposed to transdifferentiate into Myofibroblast (MYF) following injury to AT2 cells, thereby contributing to fibrosis. We hypothesized that LIF's activity could be impacted by DM or obesity in an age- and gender-dependent manner, rendering them more prone to transition toward the profibrotic MYF status in the context of severe COVID-19 pneumonia. Understanding the cumulative effects of DM and/or obesity in the context of SARS-CoV-2 infection at the cellular level will be crucial for efficient therapeutic solutions.Entities:
Keywords: Lipofibroblasts; SARS-CoV-2; alveolar epithelial type 2 cells; angiotensin-converting enzyme 2; diabetes mellitus; inflammation; myofibroblast; obesity
Year: 2021 PMID: 34307358 PMCID: PMC8295688 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.676150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Relation between DM and obesity and risk of COVID-19-related failures.
| Main purpose | Study type | Date† | Population/Location | Parameters | Key findings | References |
| Potential association between obesity and severe outcomes of COVID-19 | Retrospective cohort | April 2020 | Patients hospitalized with COVID-19/United States | Obesity, other chronic disease | Severe obesity (BMI1 ≥ 35 kg/m2) associated with ICU2 admission and IVM3 | |
| Obesity significantly associated with respiratory failure and death | Retrospective cohort | February to April 2020 | COVID-19 patients admitted to hospital/Italy | Obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2), demographic data, comorbidities, clinical and radiological examinations | Older obese patients more likely at risk for respiratory failure and death of COVID-19 | |
| Relation between obesity and SARS-CoV-2 | Retrospective cohort | February to April 2020 | patients admitted to intensive care for SARS-CoV-2/French | Moderate obesity (30 to <35 kg/m2)/severe obesity (≥35 kg/m2), epidemiological data, past medical history, treatments and clinical data | The proportion of patients who required IMV increased with male sex and BMI categories, greatest in patients with BMI > 35 kg/m2 | |
| Obesity as a risk factors of Severe illness in Patients with COVID-19 | Retrospective | January, and February 2020 | patients with COVID-19/Jiangsu, China | Obesity (BMI ≥ 28 kg/m2), clinical characteristics, complications, and outcomes of patients | Obesity as an independent risk factor of respiratory failure and acute respiratory distress syndrome | |
| Higher BMI as a risk factor for progression to severe COVID-19 | Cohort | January and February 2020 | Hospitalized patients with COVID-19/Shenzhen, China | Obesity (BMI ≥ 28 kg/m2), epidemiological, clinical and laboratory characteristics | Obese patients had increased odds of progressing to severe COVID-19. | |
| Relationship between overweight/obesity and COVID-19 | Meta-Analysis | January to June 2020 | COVID-19 patients/global | BMI, epidemiological and clinical characteristics, treatment outcomes | Patients with obesity were more at risk for COVID-19 positive, hospitalization, ICU admission, mortality | |
| Effect of obesity on outcomes in the COVID-19 hospitalizations | Meta-analysis | December 2019 to August 2020 | COVID-19 hospitalized patients/global | BMI, treatment outcomes | COVID-19 patients with pre-existing obesity had higher risk of having worse outcomes. | |
| Clinical characteristics and outcomes of Type 2 diabetes patients infected with COVID-19 | Retrospective | January to March 2020 | COVID-19 patients hospitalized with(out) diabetes ≥45 years/Hubei, China | Clinical, radiographic and laboratory features, complications, treatments, and clinical outcomes | Frequency/degree of abnormalities in CT4 chest scans markedly increased in COVID-19 patients with diabetes | |
| Risk factors for in-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients with diabetes | Retrospective | January to March 2020 | COVID-19 patients with(out) diabetes/Wuhan, China | Demographic data, underlying comorbidities, laboratory parameters on admission, CT scans | Diabetic patients with age ≥70 years and with hypertension had a higher hazard ratio for in-hospital death | |
| Diabetes as a risk factor for the progression and prognosis of COVID-19 | Retrospective | February 2020 | SARS-Cov-2 patients hospitalized with(out) diabetes/Wuhan, China | Demographic data, medical history, laboratory findings, CT scans | Diabetes as a risk factor for a rapid progression in organ damage/deterioration and inflammatory storm | |
| Independent effects of diabetes status, by type, on in-hospital death | Retrospective | March to May 2020 | COVID-19 patients with(out) diabetes/England | Demographic and clinical data | Type 1 and type 2 diabetes associated with increased odds of in-hospital death with COVID-19 | |
| Glycemic characteristics and clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients hospitalized | Retrospective cohort | March to April 2020 | Patients hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19/United States | Demographic, clinical and laboratory characteristics | Patients with uncontrolled hyperglycemia had higher median length of stay at hospital and particularly higher mortality rate. | |
| Impact of DM on COVID-19 patients | Meta-analysis | January to April 2020 | Confirmed COVID-19 patients/global | Treatment outcomes | Higher mortality and ICU admission risk in COVID-19 patients with diabetes compared to non-diabetics | |
| Association of diabetes with the clinical severity and in-hospital mortality from COVID-19 | Meta-analysis | January to May 2020 | COVID-19 patients admitted to hospital/global | Treatment outcomes | Pre-existing diabetes as a two to three times greater risk of severe/critical illness and in-hospital mortality |
FIGURE 1Synergic destructive effects of diabetes and SARS-CoV-2. In the hyperglycemia situation, accumulation of glucose into the cell can induce mitochondrial dysfunction, production of AGEs and polyol pathway activation that can induce ROS. Production of ROS can lead to cell injury and also inflammation through activation of the NFκB pathway. Also, after the virus enters into the cell through ACE2, the initial virus replication can lead to ROS induction. Once more, ROS can induce inflammation through activation of the NFκB pathway or induction of macrophage activity. Recognition of the virus by NLRP3 at the cell surface leads to binding of NLRP3 to the pro-caspase-1 through the ASC. This connection activates caspase-1 which leads to the cleavage of pro-inflammatory cytokines like pro-IL-1β, pro-IL-18, and GSMD. This results in the production of mature IL-1β and IL-18 and N-terminal products, respectively. N-terminal products located into cell membranes result in the creation of the GSMD pore. Following cell perforation and release of the cellular content into the extracellular space, inflammation, cell swelling, and pyroptosis can occur. After appearance of the adaptive immune response, generation of neutralizing antibodies and binding of macrophage virus receptors to the virus, cytokines, and chemokines such as IL-6, IFNγ, MCP-1, and IP-10 are produced and secreted into the bloodstream of patients.
FIGURE 2LIF is an important mesenchymal population supporting AT2 stem cells in terms of self-renewal and differentiation to AT1 cells. LIF cells provide triglycerides to AT2 for the elaboration of surfactant. Diabetes, obesity, aging, and gender are proposed to be the main factors impacting negatively the mesenchymal/stromal (LIF) niche activity resulting in decreased AT2-LIF interaction. Against this background, further injury to the lung leads the impaired LIF to transdifferentiate to activate myofibroblast (MYF). Accumulation of MYF is a main characteristic of lung fibrosis which over time, in particular in old males, leads to failure of lung function. Moreover, AT2 cells are the main target of virus infection which drastically reduces their function in terms of surfactant protein production. TGFβ is a causative growth factor for fibrosis induction and maintenance. We propose that TGFβ inhibitors could be instrumental in restoring impaired LIF function in the context of diabetes, obesity, gender, and aging as well as in the MYF to LIF transdifferentiation in the context of fibrosis.