4.7 Article

S100A8 may govern hyper-inflammation in severe COVID-19

期刊

FASEB JOURNAL
卷 35, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202101013

关键词

acute respiratory distress syndrome; Coronavirus disease 2019; myeloid-derived suppressor cells; Toll-like receptor

资金

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [18K07245, 21K07157, 19K03506]
  2. Smoking Research Foundation
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21K07157, 19K03506, 18K07245] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the potential role of S100A8 in COVID-19-associated ARDS and proposes a treatment method. Pathological similarities, clinical information, and experimental results collectively support the importance of S100A8 in COVID-19.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic threatens human species with mortality rate of roughly 2%. We can hardly predict the time of herd immunity against and end of COVID-19 with or without success of vaccine. One way to overcome the situation is to define what delineates disease severity and serves as a molecular target. The most successful analogy is found in BCR-ABL in chronic myeloid leukemia, which is the golden biomarker, and simultaneously, the most effective molecular target. We hypothesize that S100 calcium-binding protein A8 (S100A8) is one such molecule. The underlying evidence includes accumulating clinical information that S100A8 is upregulated in severe forms of COVID-19, pathological similarities of the affected lungs between COVID-19 and S100A8-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) model, homeostatic inflammation theory in which S100A8 is an endogenous ligand for endotoxin sensor Toll-like receptor 4/Myeloid differentiation protein-2 (TLR4/MD-2) and mediates hyper-inflammation even after elimination of endotoxin-producing extrinsic pathogens, analogous findings between COVID-19-associated ARDS and pre-metastatic lungs such as S100A8 upregulation, pulmonary recruitment of myeloid cells, increased vascular permeability, and activation coagulation cascade. A successful treatment in an animal COVID-19 model is given with a reagent capable of abrogating interaction between S100A8/S100A9 and TLR4. In this paper, we try to verify our hypothesis that S100A8 governs COVID-19-associated ARDS.

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