| Literature DB >> 36009328 |
Evangelia Eirini Tsermpini1, Una Glamočlija1,2,3, Fulden Ulucan-Karnak1,4, Sara Redenšek Trampuž1, Vita Dolžan1.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic is a leading global health and economic challenge. What defines the disease's progression is not entirely understood, but there are strong indications that oxidative stress and the defense against reactive oxygen species are crucial players. A big influx of immune cells to the site of infection is marked by the increase in reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Our article aims to highlight the critical role of oxidative stress in the emergence and severity of COVID-19 and, more importantly, to shed light on the underlying molecular and genetic mechanisms. We have reviewed the available literature and clinical trials to extract the relevant genetic variants within the oxidative stress pathway associated with COVID-19 and the anti-oxidative therapies currently evaluated in the clinical trials for COVID-19 treatment, in particular clinical trials on glutathione and N-acetylcysteine.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; N-acetylcysteine; anti-oxidative therapies; antioxidant enzymes; genetics; glutathione; oxidative stress
Year: 2022 PMID: 36009328 PMCID: PMC9405444 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11081609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1COVID-19 and oxidative stress. Abbreviations: ACE2: Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2, SARS-CoV2: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, TMPRSS2: Transmembrane protease, serine 2, ORF1a: open reading frame 1 alpha, ORF1b: open reading frame 1 beta, ORF3a: open reading frame 3 alpha, ORF6: open reading frame 6, ORF7a: open reading frame 7 alpha, ORF7b: open reading frame 7 beta, ORF8: open reading frame 8, ORF10: open reading frame 10, ROS: reactive oxygen species, NRF2: Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2, NF-kβ: Nuclear factor kappa B, NLRP3: nucleotide-binding domain (NOD)-like receptor (NLR) family pyrin domain containing 3, IL-1β: Interleukin 1 beta, IL-6: Interleukin 6, IL-18: Interleukin 18, IL-10: Interleukin 10, TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 9 August 2022).
Figure 2Glutathione and N-acetylcysteine as antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agents. Abbreviations: ROS: reactive oxygen species. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 9 August 2022).
Figure 3PRISMA diagram. *- asterisk at the root of the PubMed search terms represents any group of characters, including no character.
Overview of COVID-19 case-control studies related to oxidative stress.
| Patients | Major Findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| 430 hospitalized patients and 173 controls | Decreased thiol levels in patients versus controls | [ |
| Serum from 263 hospitalized patients and 280 controls | Increased Level of 2-hydroxybutyric acid in patients versus controls | [ |
| 182 hospitalized patients and 91 controls | Increased soluble Nox2-derived peptide in patients versus controls and ICU patients compared to non-ICU patients | [ |
| 108 hospitalized patients and 28 controls | Increased levels of SOD, CAT, oxidative cell damage (protein carbonyls and lipid peroxidation products MDA and 4-HNE), and decreased antioxidant capacity (ABTS and FRAP) in patients versus controls | [ |
| 72 hospitalized patients and 10 controls | Increased oxidized phospholipids in patients versus controls | [ |
| 50 hospitalized patients and 43 controls | Increased nitric oxygen levels and decreased native thiol and total thiol levels in patients versus controls | [ |
| 60 hospitalized patients and 24 controls | Increased lipid peroxidation and damage due to oxidative stress and decreased GSH in patients versus controls | [ |
| 52 patients and 34 controls | Increased disulfide, disulfide/native thiol ratio, and disulfide/total thiol ratio; decreased meteorin-like protein, native thiol, and native thiol/total thiol ratio in patients versus controls and no difference in total thiol levels | [ |
| 29 patients and 30 controls | Decreased serum-free thiols in patients versus controls | [ |
| 25 hospitalized patients and 25 controls | Increased prooxidant-antioxidant balance in patients versus controls | [ |
| 33 hospitalized patients | Increased oxidative stress (levels of peroxides in plasma and oxidative stress index); decreased Vitamin D and no differences in antioxidant capacity in more severe COVID-19 cases | [ |
| 40 pediatric patients and 35 healthy children | Increased total oxidant status and oxidative stress index and decreased Nrf2 and total antioxidant status in patients versus controls | [ |
| 58 patients (42 hospitalized and 16 outpatients) | Advanced oxidation protein product levels are significantly higher in hospitalized patients | [ |
| Hospitalized patients (14 not admitted to ICU and 10 admitted to ICU) and 24 controls | Increased total oxidant status, CAT and SOD activity, and total MDA level in patients versus controls; Total MDA level and SOD activity at admission to hospital were higher in patients that were later placed in ICU | [ |
| 10 mild to moderate outpatients (4–7 weeks after infection) and 15 controls | Decreased mitochondrial function in platelets and concentration of coenzyme Q10 in blood and platelets in patients versus controls | [ |
| Seminal fluid from 84 hospitalized male patients and 105 male controls | Increased ROS levels and SOD activity in patients versus controls | [ |
| Placentas from 12 asymptomatic mothers, 18 symptomatic and 16 controls | Increased DNA oxidative damage and decreased CAT and GSS activity in placentas of patients versus controls; a trend of decreased SOD1 and GSR activities was observed but without statistical significance | [ |
| Autopsy brain tissues from 10 patients and 10 controls | Increased oxidative stress with increased GSSG/GSH ratio in patients versus controls | [ |
| Post-mortem cerebral cortex samples from 3 patients and 3 controls | Decreased GSH in patients versus controls | [ |
| Post-mortem testis tissue samples from 6 patients and 6 controls | Decreased GSH in patients versus controls | [ |
| Post-mortem testes and epididymis samples from 10 patients who died due to COVID-19 and 7 controls | Increased oxidative stress damage in patients versus controls | [ |
| Post-mortem samples from 15 patients who died due to COVID-19 | Increased nitrosative stress in patients versus controls; SARS-CoV-2 infection-induced changes in mitochondrial structure and function | [ |
| 126 hospitalized COVID-19 patients, 45 hospitalized patients negative for SARS-CoV-2, 50 controls | Decreased PON1 activity in COVID-19 patients versus controls | [ |
All studies in the table are of prospective design except the last one, which was a retrospective study. Prospective studies were sorted based on the number and characteristics of subjects included in the study and the types of samples analyzed. Abbreviations: SOD: superoxide dismutase, CAT: catalase, MDA: Malondialdehyde, 4-HNE: 4-Hydroxynonenal, GSSG: glutathione disulfide, GSH: glutathione, ICU: intensive care unit, RAGE: Receptor for advanced glycation endproducts, HMGB1: high mobility group box-1 protein, COX2: cyclooxygenase-2, NOX4: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase 4, coQ10: coenzyme Q10, IMA: ischemia-modified albumin, PBMC: peripheral blood mononuclear cell, Nrf2: nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2, PON1: paraoxonase-1.
Overview of studies that focused on COVID-19 severity.
| Patients | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|
| 144 hospitalized patients (117 mild to moderate and 27 severe) and 70 controls | Increased disulfide levels in mild to moderate patients compared to controls; decreased native and total thiol levels in patients versus controls and severe compared to mild to moderate patients; no difference in disulfide levels in severe patients compared to controls | [ |
| 60 mild, 60 severe patients and 60 controls | Decreased total antioxidant capacity in patients compared to controls and in severe compared to mild COVID-19 patients; no difference in nitric oxide levels, and serum activities of SOD and CAT | [ |
| 160 hospitalized patients (31 mild, 36 moderate, 36 severe, 57 critical) | With the increased severity of the disease, increased levels of IMA were observed. With increased severity of disease, decreased levels of thiols were observed | [ |
| 86 hospitalized patients (46 children, 40 adults) and 67 controls (33 children, 34 adults) | No difference in total antioxidant status and total oxidant status | [ |
| 127 hospitalized patients (17 mild, 40 moderate and 70 severe) | Levels of superoxide anion significantly increase with increased disease severity. CAT activity in severe COVID-19 compared to moderate and mild cases. However, moderate forms had significantly lower CAT activity compared to mild forms. Decreased nitric oxide levels in severe compared to mild and moderate COVID-19 and no difference in TBARS as a measure of lipid peroxidation, hydrogen peroxide levels, SOD, and GSH activity | [ |
| 59 patients (19 mild to moderate, 23 ICU admitted and 17 reporting COVID-19 history) and 34 controls | Increased RAGE, HMGB1, and COX2 in patients admitted to the ICU compared to controls | [ |
| 96 hospitalized patients (35 non-ICU, 19 ICU with endotracheal intubation, 24 ICU without endotracheal intubation) and 18 controls | Increased total antioxidant capacity in ICU compared to non-ICU patients and association of total oxidant status with increased severity of COVID-19. Decreased GSH levels with increased COVID-19 severity. No difference in total antioxidant capacity in non-ICU patients compared to controls | [ |
| 86 hospitalized patients (40 ICU and 46 non-ICU) | Increased total oxidant status and oxidative stress index and decreased thiol levels and total antioxidant status in ICU patients | [ |
| 77 hospitalized patients (44 moderate and 33 severe) | No difference in total antioxidant capacity, GST activity, H2O2 levels, GSH, oxidized GSH, MDA, carbonyls, sulfhydryl’s | [ |
| 60 hospitalized patients (29 with ARDS and 31 without ARDS) | Decreased total and native thiol levels in severe compared to mild/moderate patients in both pediatric and adult populations | [ |
| 58 hospitalized patients (35 non-severe, 23 severe) and 30 controls | Increased coenzyme Q10, MDA, NOX4, and IMA and levels of reduced Q10 in patients versus controls; In severe compared to non-severe COVID-19 patients, increased Q10, MDA, and ischemia-modified albumin were observed while levels of reduced Q10 were similar | [ |
| 31 mild, 4 moderate and 12 severe patients and 21 controls | Increased lipid peroxidation, CAT and SOD activity, ferritin and mitochondrial superoxide in circulating monocytes, and decreased GSH levels in PBMC lysates of patients versus controls; no difference in total antioxidant response and iron levels; inflammasome activation, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, and metabolic shift from OXPHOS to glycolysis in patients with different severity; these changes were still observed after short term recovery, independently of disease severity | [ |
| 50 hospitalized patients (20 moderate, 30 severe) | Increased oxidative stress in patients with fatal outcomes was observed after 7 hospitalization days, while in surviving patients, oxidative stress was decreased | [ |
| 39 patients with critical COVID-19 | Increased plasma H2O2 and damaged serum albumin in patients with fatal outcome | [ |
| 34 hospitalized patients (34 mild, 22 moderate to severe) | Decreased GSH in moderate and severe patients compared to mild | [ |
| 31 hospitalized patients admitted to ICU | No relation between oxidative stress markers’ levels at admission to ICU and COVID-19 outcome | [ |
| 21 critically ill COVID-19 patient (14 recovered and 7 fatal outcome) | HNE adduct proteins in the first three hospitalization days were decreased compared to surviving patients; Total antioxidant capacity was below the detection limit | [ |
| Nine critically ill hospitalized patients | Systemic oxidative stress strongly altered in critically ill COVID-19 patients | [ |
All studies in the table are of prospective design. Studies were sorted based on the number and characteristics of subjects included in the study. Abbreviations: SOD: superoxide dismutase, CAT: catalase, TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, GSH: glutathione, GST: glutathione-S-transferase, MDA: malondialdehyde, H2O2: hydrogen peroxide, IMA: ischemia-modified albumin, ICU: intensive care unit, ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome, HNE: 4-hydroxynonenal.
Overview of candidate gene studies that involved genes and genetic variants in oxidative stress pathways in COVID-19 patients.
| Genes and Variants | Genotyping Method | Cohort | Origin | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple PCR (deletions), PCR-RFLP | 207 patients, 252 controls | Serbian, Caucasian | Association between rs1695 and rs1332018 heterozygotes and rs1138272 Val allele carriers with decreased COVID-19 risk | [ | |
| Multiple PCR | 269 patients (149 mild and 120 severe) | NA | Association between | [ | |
| PCR-RFLP, real-time PCR, 2-pair primers (CTPP) PCR | 229 patients and 229 controls | Serbian, Caucasian | Association between GSTP1 haplotype and COVID-19 risk. | [ | |
| PCR-RFLP | 79 patients, 100 controls | NA | No statistically significant difference neither in genotypic nor allelic level | [ |
NA: not available.
Overview of GWAS studies in COVID-19.
| Type of Research | Number of Participants | Ethnicity | Number of Associations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meta-analysis | 835 patients and 1255 controls from Italy and 775 patients and 950 controls from Spain | European | 25 | [ |
| Meta-analysis | 1457 genotyped (598/859 with severe/mild symptoms) and 1141 sequenced (severe/mild: 474/667) Chinese patients. | Chinese | 0 | [ |
| Original research | 1723 outpatients with at least one risk factor for disease severity from the COLCORONA clinical trial | European | 3 | [ |
| Original research | 2244 critically ill patients with COVID-19 from 208 UK ICUs | Mixed | 8 | [ |
| Original research | 1778 infected cases | European | 12 | [ |
| Meta-analysis | 3288 COVID-19 patients676,840 controls | European | 3 | [ |
| Meta-analysis | 1,051,032 23 andMe research participants | Mixed | 360 | [ |
| Meta-analysis | 1678 COVID-19 cases and 674,635 controls | NA | 2 | [ |
| Initiative | 105 studies | Global initiative | 0 | [ |
| Original research | 175,977 participants | European | 17 | [ |
| Original research | COVID-19 phenotypes: 482 hospitalized and 164 non-hospitalized participants | GWAS: Arabic trans-ancestry meta-analysis: European, American, South Asian, and East Asian | 8 | [ |
ICU: intensive care unit, COLCORONA: Colchicine Coronavirus SARS-CoV2 Trial, NA: not available.
Figure 4Oxidative stress biomarkers in COVID-19 development and severity. During SARS-CoV-2 infection, ROS levels are increased, and an imbalance between thiol and disulfide leads to lipid peroxidation. More specifically, O2.− is converted to H2O2 via SOD, which is further converted into H2O and O2 through CAT. In the Fenton reaction, levels of OH. are increased, which then reacts with lipids to initiate lipid peroxidation. Different lipid peroxidation products are derived from the process, ending with acrolein, HNE, and MDA. LOOH and H2O2 are reduced to lipid alcohols and water, respectively, by GPX. In this enzymatic reaction, reduced GSH is converted to glutathione disulfide, which is then regenerated with GR. Acrolein, HNE, and MDA are conjugated with glutathione via the GST enzymatic reaction. Since a lot of glutathione is used in the process, N-acetyl cysteine can be used to replenish it. Abbreviations: O2.−: superoxide, H2O2: hydrogen peroxide, OH-: hydroxide, LOOH: Lipid hydroperoxide, SOD: superoxide dismutase, CAT: catalase, GPX: glutathione peroxidase, GR: Glutathione reductase, GSH: glutathione, GSSG: glutathione disulfide (oxidized glutathione), LOH: lipid hydroperoxide, HNE: hydroxynonenal, MDA: Malondialdehyde, GTS: glutathione-S- transferase. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 9 August 2022).
Published studies supporting GSH supplementation in COVID-19.
| Therapeutic Agent | Objectives of the Study | Major Findings | Type of Study | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GSH | To explore the role of GSH and other thiols in neutralizing the effect of peroxynitrite-mediated DNA damage through stable GSH-DNA adduct formation | Protective role of GSH against the PN-mediated toxic effect at the site of inflammation | In vitro | [ |
| GSNO or GSNO-Nebulization | To explore IV infusion of GSNO in nebulization (diabetic stroke, hypoxia circumstances as COVID-19) | GSNO-nebulization enhanced collateral microvascular perfusion in the early hours of hypoxia | In vivo mice model | [ |
| GlyNAC | To explore the GlyNAC effect on longevity in mice | GlyNAC mice lived longer than controls, improved/corrected impaired GSH synthesis, GSH deficiency, OxS, mitochondrial dysfunction, abnormal mitophagy and nutrient-sensing, and genomic-damage | In vivo mice model | [ |
| Case 1: a dose of 2 g up to twice a day PO + probiotics | To explore the effects of using high dose oral and/or IV GSH in the treatment of 2 patients with dyspnea secondary to COVID-19 pneumonia | Oral and IV GSH may represent a novel treatment approach for blocking NF-κB and addressing “cytokine storm syndrome” and respiratory distress in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia | Case report (2 patients) | [ |
GSH: glutathione, NAC: N-Acetylcysteine, IV: intravenous, GSNO: S-Nitrosoglutathione, GlyNAC: combination of glycine and NAC.
Published studies on NAC administration in COVID-19 patients.
| Therapeutic Agent | Objectives of the Study | Number of Patients | Major Findings | Type of Study | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAC + standard palliative care and drugs + remdesivir + dexamethasone | Evaluate NAC effects in hospitalized COVID-19 pneumonia cases in terms of SRF progression and mortality | 82 patients (42 NAC and 40 controls) | Oral NAC provided lower SRF and mortality compared to controls | Retrospective, two-center study | [ |
| NAC + standard of care | Explore the potential benefits of high NAC dose in COVID-19 | 19208 patients (2071 NAC, 17,137 controls) | Oral NAC provided significantly lower mortality | Observational retrospective study | [ |
| NAC | Explore potential effects on sperm concentrations and quality | 200 men with COVID-19 history last three months 100 NAC, 100 controls) | Oral NAC consumption significantly improved sperm total motility, sperm morphology, and sperm concentration | Interventional study | [ |
| NAC inhalation after treatment with antibiotics, antiviral and antibacterial medications, respiratory support, expectorant nebulization, and nutritional support | Observe NAC inhalation solution combined with routine nebulization on patient | 1 patient | Refractory hypercapnia gradually improved | Case report | [ |
| NAC + hydroxychloroquine + ECMO | Explore whether GSH deficiency is reversible with NAC administration | 10 patients with G6PD deficiency | NAC reduced CRP and ferritin levels of G6PD deficient patients | Case report | [ |
| NAC | Explore the effects of NAC on COVID-19 severity | 30 patients (14 NAC, 16 controls) | No effect on the evolution of severe COVID-19 | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial | [ |
| NAC | Evaluate the potential benefits of NAC in patients with COVID19-associated ARDS | 92 patients (45 placebo, 47 NAC) | No improvement in patients receiving NAC | Single center clinical trial | [ |
| NAC inhalation; 5% saline solution; or 8.4% sodium bicarbonate + control group (no routine inhalation) | Evaluate the effect of routine inhalation therapy on VAP in mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients | 175 patients who were treated with mechanical ventilation | Routine inhalation therapy had no effect on the incidence of bacterial or fungal VAP nor all-cause mortality, but a significant reduction of Gram-positive and MRSA VAP was observed in the treatment groups | Randomized controlled trial | [ |
| IV NAC | Investigate whether IV NAC attenuates the cytokine storm | 10 COVID-19 positive patients | No benefit of IV NAC | Retrospective case series | [ |
GSH: glutathione, NAC: N-Acetylcysteine, SRF: severe respiratory failure, ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome, G6PD: Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, ECMO: extracorporeal membrane oxygenator, VAP: ventilator-associated pneumonia, MRSA: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, IV: intravenous.
Registered clinical trials on NAC or GSH supplementation in COVID-19 treatment that are recruiting patients or have been completed.
| Clinical Trial ID Number | Title | Location | Interventions | Status | Study Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04703036 | Glutathione, Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Function in COVID-19 | United States | Glycine, NAC, alanine | Recruiting | No |
| NCT04458298 | A Study to Evaluate OP-101 (Dendrimer N-acetyl-cysteine) in Severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Patients | United States | OP-101, placebo | Recruiting | No |
| NCT04573153 | Metabolic Cofactor Supplementation and Hydroxychloroquine Combination in COVID-19 Patients | Turkey | Hydroxychloroquine + metabolic cofactor, hydroxychloroquine + sorbitol | Recruiting | No |
| NCT04483973 | SPI-1005 Treatment in Severe COVID-19 Patients | United States | Ebselen, placebo | Enrolling by invitation | No |
| NCT04484025 | SPI-1005 Treatment in Moderate COVID-19 Patients | United States | Ebselen, placebo | Enrolling by invitation | No |
| NCT04797871 | Resistance Training and Clinical Status in Patients With Post Discharge Symptoms After COVID-19 | Spain | Behavioral: Resistance training, Standard care | Enrolling by invitation | No |
| NCT04569851 | Clinical Characteristics and Prognostic Factors of Patients With COVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease 2019) | Spain | NA | Enrolling by invitation | No |
| NCT04742725 | A Study to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Prothione Capsules for Mild to Moderate COVID-19 | Rwanda | Prothione, placebo | Completed | No |
| NCT04792021 | Effect of N-acetylcysteine on Oxidative Stress in COVID-19 Patients | Egypt | NAC | Completed | No |
| NCT04419025 | Efficacy of N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) in Preventing COVID-19 From Progressing to Severe Disease | United States | NAC | Completed | No |
| NCT04900129 | Inhalation of Vapor With Medication (Diclofenac Sodium, Menthol, Methyl Salicylate and N-Acetyl Cysteine) Reduces Oxygen Need and Hospital Stay in COVID-19 Patients—A Case Control Study | Bangladesh | Combination of menthol, methyl salicylate, NAC and diclofenac sodium | Completed | No |
| NCT04570254 | Antioxidants as Adjuvant Therapy to Standard Therapy in Patients With COVID-19 | Mexico | Vitamin C, vitamin E, melatonin, NAC, pentoxifylline | Completed | No |
| NCT04755972 | Mucolytics in Patients on Invasive Mechanical Ventilation Due to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 | Croatia | Inhalation of NAC, inhalation of sodium chloride, inhalation of sodium bicarbonate | Completed | No |
| NCT04666753 | Retrospective Study of ImmunoFormulation for COVID-19 | Spain | ImmunoFormulation | Completed | No |
NAC: N-Acetylcysteine, NA: not available.