Metabolic Profiling at COVID-19 Onset Shows Disease Severity and Sex-Specific Dysregulation

Author:

Ceballos Francisco C.,Virseda-Berdices Ana,Resino Salvador,Ryan Pablo,Martínez-González Oscar,Peréz-García Felipe,Martin-Vicente María,Brochado-Kith Oscar,Blancas Rafael,Bartolome-Sánchez Sofía,Vidal-Alcántara Erick Joan,Albóniga-Díez Oihane Elena,Cuadros-González Juan,Blanca-López Natalia,Martínez Isidoro,Martinez-Acitores Ignacio Ramirez,Barbas Coral,Fernández-Rodríguez Amanda,Jiménez-Sousa María Ángeles

Abstract

Backgroundmetabolic changes through SARS-CoV-2 infection has been reported but not fully comprehended. This metabolic dysregulation affects multiple organs during COVID-19 and its early detection can be used as a prognosis marker of severity. Therefore, we aimed to characterize metabolic and cytokine profile at COVID-19 onset and its relationship with disease severity to identify metabolic profiles predicting disease progression.Material and Methodswe performed a retrospective cross-sectional study in 123 COVID-19 patients which were stratified as asymptomatic/mild, moderate and severe according to the highest COVID-19 severity status, and a group of healthy controls. We performed an untargeted plasma metabolic profiling (gas chromatography and capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (GC and CE-MS)) and cytokine evaluation.ResultsAfter data filtering and identification we observed 105 metabolites dysregulated (66 GC-MS and 40 CE-MS) which shown different expression patterns for each COVID-19 severity status. These metabolites belonged to different metabolic pathways including amino acid, energy, and nitrogen metabolism among others. Severity-specific metabolic dysregulation was observed, as an increased transformation of L-tryptophan into L-kynurenine. Thus, metabolic profiling at hospital admission differentiate between severe and moderate patients in the later phase of worse evolution. Several plasma pro-inflammatory biomarkers showed significant correlation with deregulated metabolites, specially with L-kynurenine and L-tryptophan. Finally, we describe a strong sex-related dysregulation of metabolites, cytokines and chemokines between severe and moderate patients. In conclusion, metabolic profiling of COVID-19 patients at disease onset is a powerful tool to unravel the SARS-CoV-2 molecular pathogenesis.ConclusionsThis technique makes it possible to identify metabolic phenoconversion that predicts disease progression and explains the pronounced pathogenesis differences between sexes.

Funder

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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