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Severity of COVID-19 Patients Predicted by Serum Sphingolipids Signature

Authors :
Torretta, Enrica
Garziano, Micaela
Poliseno, Mariacristina
Capitanio, Daniele
Biasin, Mara
Santantonio, Teresa Antonia
Clerici, Mario
Lo Caputo, Sergio
Trabattoni, Daria
Gelfi, Cecilia
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 22, Iss 10198, p 10198 (2021), International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 22, Issue 19
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

The reason behind the high inter-individual variability in response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and patient’s outcome is poorly understood. The present study targets the sphingolipid profile of twenty-four healthy controls and fifty-nine COVID-19 patients with different disease severity. Sera were analyzed by untargeted and targeted mass spectrometry and ELISA. Results indicated a progressive increase in dihydrosphingosine, dihydroceramides, ceramides, sphingosine, and a decrease in sphingosine-1-phosphate. These changes are associated with a serine palmitoyltransferase long chain base subunit 1 (SPTLC1) increase in relation to COVID-19 severity. Severe patients showed a decrease in sphingomyelins and a high level of acid sphingomyelinase (aSMase) that influences monosialodihexosyl ganglioside (GM3) C16:0 levels. Critical patients are characterized by high levels of dihydrosphingosine and dihydroceramide but not of glycosphingolipids. In severe and critical patients, unbalanced lipid metabolism induces lipid raft remodeling, leads to cell apoptosis and immunoescape, suggesting active sphingolipid participation in viral infection. Furthermore, results indicated that the sphingolipid and glycosphingolipid metabolic rewiring promoted by aSMase and GM3 is age-dependent but also characteristic of severe and critical patients influencing prognosis and increasing viral load. AUCs calculated from ROC curves indicated ceramides C16:0, C18:0, C24:1, sphingosine and SPTLC1 as putative biomarkers of disease evolution

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16616596 and 14220067
Volume :
22
Issue :
10198
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....6cf995367fbec35daaa5120c87e1ff1b