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Proteomic and Metabolomic Investigation of COVID-19 Patients with Elevated Serum Lactate Dehydrogenase

Authors :
Fangfei Zhang
Juping Du
Luang Xu
Mengge Lyu
Hongguo Zhu
Dongqing Lv
Liang Yue
Liang Xiao
Yi Zhu
Yu Wang
Haixi Yan
Bo Shen
Chao Zhang
Guan Ruan
Tiannan Guo
Shiyong Chen
Biyun Qian
Jun Li
Zebao He
Haixiao Chen
Zhangzhi Xue
Zongmei Lin
Jiaqin Xu
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) has been established as a prognostic indicator given its differential expression in COVID-19 patients. However, the molecular mechanisms underneath remain poorly understood. In this study, 144 COVID-19 patients were enrolled to monitor the clinical and laboratory parameters over three weeks. Serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was shown elevated in the COVID-19 patients on admission and declined throughout disease course, and its ability to classify patient severity outperformed other biochemical indicators. A threshold of 247 U/L serum LDH on admission was determined for severity prognosis. Next, we classified a subset of 14 patients into high- and low-risk groups based on serum LDH expression and compared their quantitative serum proteomic and metabolomic differences. The results found COVID-19 patients with high serum LDH exhibited differentially expressed blood coagulation and immune responses including acute inflammatory responses, platelet degranulation, complement cascade, as well as multiple different metabolic responses including lipid metabolism, protein ubiquitination and pyruvate fermentation. Specifically, activation of hypoxia responses was highlighted in patients with high LDH expressions. Taken together, our data showed that serum LDH levels are associated COVID-19 severity, and that elevated serum LDH might be consequences of hypoxia and tissue injuries induced by inflammation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2642496f31654f014437ff2b738bca7e