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1.
ESC Heart Fail ; 9(5): 2937-2954, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1894590

ABSTRACT

AIMS: The co-morbidities contribute to the inferior prognosis of COVID-19 patients. Recent reports suggested that the higher co-morbidity rate between COVID-19 and heart failure (HF) leads to increased mortality. However, the common pathogenic mechanism between them remained elusive. Here, we aimed to reveal underlying molecule mechanisms and genetic correlation between COVID-19 and HF, providing a new perspective on current clinical management for patients with co-morbidity. METHODS: The gene expression profiles of HF (GSE26887) and COVID-19 (GSE147507) were retrieved from the GEO database. After identifying the common differentially expressed genes (|log2FC| > 1 and adjusted P < 0.05), integrated analyses were performed, namely, enrichment analyses, protein-protein interaction network, module construction, critical gene identification, and functional co-expression analysis. The performance of critical genes was validation combining hierarchical clustering, correlation, and principal component analysis in external datasets (GSE164805 and GSE9128). Potential transcription factors and miRNAs were obtained from the JASPER and RegNetwork repository used to construct co-regulatory networks. The candidate drug compounds in potential genetic link targets were further identified using the DSigDB database. RESULTS: The alteration of 12 genes was identified as a shared transcriptional signature, with the role of immune inflammatory pathway, especially Toll-like receptor, NF-kappa B, chemokine, and interleukin-related pathways that primarily emphasized in response to SARS-CoV-2 complicated with HF. Top 10 critical genes (TLR4, TLR2, CXCL8, IL10, STAT3, IL1B, TLR1, TP53, CCL20, and CXCL10) were identified from protein-protein interaction with topological algorithms. The unhealthy microbiota status and gut-heart axis in co-morbidity were identified as potential disease roads in bridging pathogenic mechanism, and lipopolysaccharide acts as a potential marker for monitoring HF during COVID-19. For transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels, regulation networks tightly coupling with both disorders were constructed, and significant regulator signatures with high interaction degree, especially FOXC1, STAT3, NF-κB1, miR-181, and miR-520, were detected to regulate common differentially expressed genes. According to genetic links targets, glutathione-based antioxidant strategy combined with muramyl dipeptide-based microbe-derived immunostimulatory therapies was identified as promising anti-COVID-19 and anti-HF therapeutics. CONCLUSIONS: This study identified shared transcriptomic and corresponding regulatory signatures as emerging therapeutic targets and detected a set of pharmacologic agents targeting genetic links. Our findings provided new insights for underlying pathogenic mechanisms between COVID-19 and HF.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Heart Failure , MicroRNAs , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/genetics , Systems Biology , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Heart Failure/epidemiology , Heart Failure/genetics
2.
Clinical eHealth ; 3:7-15, 2020.
Article in English | PMC | ID: covidwho-822402

ABSTRACT

The aim is to diagnose COVID-19 earlier and to improve its treatment by applying medical technology, the “COVID-19 Intelligent Diagnosis and Treatment Assistant Program (nCapp)” based on the Internet of Things. Terminal eight functions can be implemented in real-time online communication with the “cloud” through the page selection key. According to existing data, questionnaires, and check results, the diagnosis is automatically generated as confirmed, suspected, or suspicious of 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) infection. It classifies patients into mild, moderate, severe or critical pneumonia. nCapp can also establish an online COVID-19 real-time update database, and it updates the model of diagnosis in real time based on the latest real-world case data to improve diagnostic accuracy. Additionally, nCapp can guide treatment. Front-line physicians, experts, and managers are linked to perform consultation and prevention. nCapp also contributes to the long-term follow-up of patients with COVID-19. The ultimate goal is to enable different levels of COVID-19 diagnosis and treatment among different doctors from different hospitals to upgrade to the national and international through the intelligent assistance of the nCapp system. In this way, we can block disease transmission, avoid physician infection, and epidemic prevention and control as soon as possible.

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