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Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease

The epithelial barrier’s primary role is to protect against entry of foreign and pathogenic elements. Both COVID-19 and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) show commonalities in symptoms and treatment with sensitization of the epithelial barrier inviting an immune response. In this study we use a multi...

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Autores principales: Bustamante, Sonia, Yau, Yunki, Boys, Victoria, Chang, Jeff, Paramsothy, Sudarshan, Pudipeddi, Aviv, Leong, Rupert W., Wasinger, Valerie C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9737535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36499104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232314776
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author Bustamante, Sonia
Yau, Yunki
Boys, Victoria
Chang, Jeff
Paramsothy, Sudarshan
Pudipeddi, Aviv
Leong, Rupert W.
Wasinger, Valerie C.
author_facet Bustamante, Sonia
Yau, Yunki
Boys, Victoria
Chang, Jeff
Paramsothy, Sudarshan
Pudipeddi, Aviv
Leong, Rupert W.
Wasinger, Valerie C.
author_sort Bustamante, Sonia
collection PubMed
description The epithelial barrier’s primary role is to protect against entry of foreign and pathogenic elements. Both COVID-19 and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) show commonalities in symptoms and treatment with sensitization of the epithelial barrier inviting an immune response. In this study we use a multi-omics strategy to identify a common signature of immune disease that may be able to predict for more severe patient outcomes. Global proteomic approaches were applied to transcriptome and proteome. Further semi- and relative- quantitative targeted mass spectrometry methods were developed to substantiate the proteomic and metabolomics changes in nasal swabs from healthy, COVID-19 (24 h and 3 weeks post infection); serums from Crohn’s disease patients (scored for epithelial leak), terminal ileum tissue biopsies (patient matched inflamed and non-inflamed regions, and controls). We found that the tryptophan/kynurenine metabolism pathway is a ‘hub’ regulator of canonical and non-canonical transcription, macrophage release of cytokines and significant changes in the immune and metabolic status with increasing severity and disease course. Significantly modified pathways include stress response regulator EIF2 signaling (p = 1 × 10(−3)); energy metabolism, KYNU (p = 4 × 10(−4)), WARS (p = 1 × 10(−7)); inflammation, and IDO activity (p = 1 × 10(−6)). Heightened levels of PARP1, WARS and KYNU are predictive at the acute stage of infection for resilience, while in contrast, levels remained high and are predictive of persistent and more severe outcomes in COVID disease. Generation of a targeted marker profile showed these changes in immune disease underlay resolution of epithelial barrier function and have the potential to define disease trajectory and more severe patient outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-97375352022-12-11 Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease Bustamante, Sonia Yau, Yunki Boys, Victoria Chang, Jeff Paramsothy, Sudarshan Pudipeddi, Aviv Leong, Rupert W. Wasinger, Valerie C. Int J Mol Sci Article The epithelial barrier’s primary role is to protect against entry of foreign and pathogenic elements. Both COVID-19 and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) show commonalities in symptoms and treatment with sensitization of the epithelial barrier inviting an immune response. In this study we use a multi-omics strategy to identify a common signature of immune disease that may be able to predict for more severe patient outcomes. Global proteomic approaches were applied to transcriptome and proteome. Further semi- and relative- quantitative targeted mass spectrometry methods were developed to substantiate the proteomic and metabolomics changes in nasal swabs from healthy, COVID-19 (24 h and 3 weeks post infection); serums from Crohn’s disease patients (scored for epithelial leak), terminal ileum tissue biopsies (patient matched inflamed and non-inflamed regions, and controls). We found that the tryptophan/kynurenine metabolism pathway is a ‘hub’ regulator of canonical and non-canonical transcription, macrophage release of cytokines and significant changes in the immune and metabolic status with increasing severity and disease course. Significantly modified pathways include stress response regulator EIF2 signaling (p = 1 × 10(−3)); energy metabolism, KYNU (p = 4 × 10(−4)), WARS (p = 1 × 10(−7)); inflammation, and IDO activity (p = 1 × 10(−6)). Heightened levels of PARP1, WARS and KYNU are predictive at the acute stage of infection for resilience, while in contrast, levels remained high and are predictive of persistent and more severe outcomes in COVID disease. Generation of a targeted marker profile showed these changes in immune disease underlay resolution of epithelial barrier function and have the potential to define disease trajectory and more severe patient outcomes. MDPI 2022-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9737535/ /pubmed/36499104 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232314776 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bustamante, Sonia
Yau, Yunki
Boys, Victoria
Chang, Jeff
Paramsothy, Sudarshan
Pudipeddi, Aviv
Leong, Rupert W.
Wasinger, Valerie C.
Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title_full Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title_fullStr Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title_full_unstemmed Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title_short Tryptophan Metabolism ‘Hub’ Gene Expression Associates with Increased Inflammation and Severe Disease Outcomes in COVID-19 Infection and Inflammatory Bowel Disease
title_sort tryptophan metabolism ‘hub’ gene expression associates with increased inflammation and severe disease outcomes in covid-19 infection and inflammatory bowel disease
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9737535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36499104
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232314776
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