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Plasma cell-free RNA characteristics in COVID-19 patients

Authors :
Yanqun Wang
Jie Li
Lu Zhang
Hai-Xi Sun
Zhaoyong Zhang
Jinjin Xu
Yonghao Xu
Yu Lin
Airu Zhu
Yuxue Luo
Haibo Zhou
Yan Wu
Shanwen Lin
Yuzhe Sun
Fei Xiao
Ruiying Chen
Liyan Wen
Wei Chen
Fang Li
Rijing Ou
Yanjun Zhang
Tingyou Kuo
Yuming Li
Lingguo Li
Jing Sun
Kun Sun
Zhen Zhuang
Haorong Lu
Zhao Chen
Guoqiang Mai
Jianfen Zhuo
Puyi Qian
Jiayu Chen
Huanming Yang
Jian Wang
Xun Xu
Nanshan Zhong
Jingxian Zhao
Junhua Li
Jincun Zhao
Xin Jin
Source :
Genome research. 32(2)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The pathogenesis of COVID-19 is still elusive, which impedes disease progression prediction, differential diagnosis, and targeted therapy. Plasma cell-free RNAs (cfRNAs) carry unique information from human tissue and thus could point to resourceful solutions for pathogenesis and host-pathogen interactions. Here, we performed a comparative analysis of cfRNA profiles between COVID-19 patients and healthy donors using serial plasma. Analyses of the cfRNA landscape, potential gene regulatory mechanisms, dynamic changes in tRNA pools upon infection, and microbial communities were performed. A total of 380 cfRNA molecules were up-regulated in all COVID-19 patients, of which seven could serve as potential biomarkers (AUC > 0.85) with great sensitivity and specificity. Antiviral (NFKB1A,IFITM3, andIFI27) and neutrophil activation (S100A8,CD68, andCD63)–related genes exhibited decreased expression levels during treatment in COVID-19 patients, which is in accordance with the dynamically enhanced inflammatory response in COVID-19 patients. Noncoding RNAs, including some microRNAs (let 7 family) and long noncoding RNAs (GJA9-MYCBP) targeting interleukin (IL6/IL6R), were differentially expressed between COVID-19 patients and healthy donors, which accounts for the potential core mechanism of cytokine storm syndromes; the tRNA pools change significantly between the COVID-19 and healthy group, leading to the accumulation of SARS-CoV-2 biased codons, which facilitate SARS-CoV-2 replication. Finally, several pneumonia-related microorganisms were detected in the plasma of COVID-19 patients, raising the possibility of simultaneously monitoring immune response regulation and microbial communities using cfRNA analysis. This study fills the knowledge gap in the plasma cfRNA landscape of COVID-19 patients and offers insight into the potential mechanisms of cfRNAs to explain COVID-19 pathogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
15495469
Volume :
32
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d842728fba1fe6dbf082eb6ea8066f49