Author:
Suvarna Kruthi,Biswas Deeptarup,Pai Medha Gayathri J.,Acharjee Arup,Bankar Renuka,Palanivel Viswanthram,Salkar Akanksha,Verma Ayushi,Mukherjee Amrita,Choudhury Manisha,Ghantasala Saicharan,Ghosh Susmita,Singh Avinash,Banerjee Arghya,Badaya Apoorva,Bihani Surbhi,Loya Gaurish,Mantri Krishi,Burli Ananya,Roy Jyotirmoy,Srivastava Alisha,Agrawal Sachee,Shrivastav Om,Shastri Jayanthi,Srivastava Sanjeeva
Abstract
The pestilential pathogen SARS-CoV-2 has led to a seemingly ceaseless pandemic of COVID-19. The healthcare sector is under a tremendous burden, thus necessitating the prognosis of COVID-19 severity. This in-depth study of plasma proteome alteration provides insights into the host physiological response towards the infection and also reveals the potential prognostic markers of the disease. Using label-free quantitative proteomics, we performed deep plasma proteome analysis in a cohort of 71 patients (20 COVID-19 negative, 18 COVID-19 non-severe, and 33 severe) to understand the disease dynamics. Of the 1200 proteins detected in the patient plasma, 38 proteins were identified to be differentially expressed between non-severe and severe groups. The altered plasma proteome revealed significant dysregulation in the pathways related to peptidase activity, regulated exocytosis, blood coagulation, complement activation, leukocyte activation involved in immune response, and response to glucocorticoid biological processes in severe cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Furthermore, we employed supervised machine learning (ML) approaches using a linear support vector machine model to identify the classifiers of patients with non-severe and severe COVID-19. The model used a selected panel of 20 proteins and classified the samples based on the severity with a classification accuracy of 0.84. Putative biomarkers such as angiotensinogen and SERPING1 and ML-derived classifiers including the apolipoprotein B, SERPINA3, and fibrinogen gamma chain were validated by targeted mass spectrometry-based multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) assays. We also employed an in silico screening approach against the identified target proteins for the therapeutic management of COVID-19. We shortlisted two FDA-approved drugs, namely, selinexor and ponatinib, which showed the potential of being repurposed for COVID-19 therapeutics. Overall, this is the first most comprehensive plasma proteome investigation of COVID-19 patients from the Indian population, and provides a set of potential biomarkers for the disease severity progression and targets for therapeutic interventions.
Funder
Science and Engineering Research Board
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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