4.7 Article

BPIFB4 Circulating Levels and Its Prognostic Relevance in COVID-19

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glab208

Keywords

Immunity function; Longevity; Plasma; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. Cariplo Foundation [2016-0874]
  2. Ministry of Health [RF-2016-02364864]
  3. Italian Ministry of Health Ricerca Corrente-IRCCS Multi-Medica

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Long-living individuals have higher levels of BPIFB4 and are more resistant to COVID-19, while COVID-19 patients show a significant decrease in BPIFB4 levels that correlates with disease severity. LAV-BPIFB4 has shown protective effects in the early stages of virus infection, suggesting new therapeutic possibilities for vulnerable populations.
Aging and comorbidities make individuals at greatest risk of COVID-19 serious illness and mortality due to senescence-related events and deleterious inflammation. Long-living individuals (LLIs) are less susceptible to inflammation and develop more resiliency to COVID-19. As demonstrated, LLIs are characterized by high circulating levels of BPIFB4, a protein involved in homeostatic response to inflammatory stimuli. Also, LLIs show enrichment of homozygous genotype for the minor alleles of a 4 missense single-nucleotide polymorphism haplotype (longevity-associated variant [LAV]) in BPIFB4, able to counteract progression of diseases in animal models. Thus, the present study was designed to assess the presence and significance of BPIFB4 level in COVID-19 patients and the potential therapeutic use of LAV-BPIFB4 in fighting COVID-19. BPIFB4 plasma concentration was found significantly higher in LLIs compared to old healthy controls while it significantly decreased in 64 COVID-19 patients. Further, the drop in BPIFB4 values correlated with disease severity. Accordingly to the LAV-BPIFB4 immunomodulatory role, while lysates of SARS-CoV-2-infected cells induced an inflammatory response in healthy peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro, the co-treatment with recombinant protein (rh) LAV-BPIFB4 resulted in a protective and self-limiting reaction, culminating in the downregulation of CD69 activating-marker for T cells (both TCD4(+) and TCD8(+)) and in MCP-1 reduction. On the contrary, rhLAV-BPIFB4 induced a rapid increase in IL-18 and IL-lb levels, shown largely protective during the early stages of the virus infection. This evidence, along with the ability of rhLAV-BPIFB4 to counteract the cytotoxicity induced by SARS-CoV-2 lysate in selected target cell lines, corroborates BPIFB4 prognostic value and open new therapeutic possibilities in more vulnerable people.

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