4.6 Article

Mechanisms contributing to adverse outcomes of COVID-19 in obesity

期刊

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
卷 477, 期 4, 页码 1155-1193

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11010-022-04356-w

关键词

COVID-19; Obesity; Adiposopathy; mTOR; Metabolic reprogramming; ER stress; Adipokines; miRNA

资金

  1. Indian Council for Medical Research, New Delhi [3/1/2(16)/OBS/2019-NCD-II]

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Epidemiological data from multiple countries indicate an increased prevalence of obesity, especially central obesity, among hospitalized subjects with COVID-19. Obesity is a metabolic disorder that affects immune and endocrine function, and it is a major contributing factor to adverse outcomes in COVID-19.
A growing amount of epidemiological data from multiple countries indicate an increased prevalence of obesity, more importantly central obesity, among hospitalized subjects with COVID-19. This suggests that obesity is a major factor contributing to adverse outcome of the disease. As it is a metabolic disorder with dysregulated immune and endocrine function, it is logical that dysfunctional metabolism contributes to the mechanisms behind obesity being a risk factor for adverse outcome in COVID-19. Emerging data suggest that in obese subjects, (a) the molecular mechanisms of viral entry and spread mediated through ACE2 receptor, a multifunctional host cell protein which links to cellular homeostasis mechanisms, are affected. This includes perturbation of the physiological renin-angiotensin system pathway causing pro-inflammatory and pro-thrombotic challenges (b) existent metabolic overload and ER stress-induced UPR pathway make obese subjects vulnerable to severe COVID-19, (c) host cell response is altered involving reprogramming of metabolism and epigenetic mechanisms involving microRNAs in line with changes in obesity, and (d) adiposopathy with altered endocrine, adipokine, and cytokine profile contributes to altered immune cell metabolism, systemic inflammation, and vascular endothelial dysfunction, exacerbating COVID-19 pathology. In this review, we have examined the available literature on the underlying mechanisms contributing to obesity being a risk for adverse outcome in COVID-19.

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