Oxidative stress is a shared characteristic of ME/CFS and Long COVID.
Study Design
- Tipo di studio
- Observational Study
- Dimensione del campione
- 72
- Popolazione
- ME/CFS (n=27) and Long COVID (n=20) vs healthy controls
- Intervento
- Oxidative stress is a shared characteristic of ME/CFS and Long COVID. None
- Comparatore
- Healthy controls (n=25)
- Esito primario
- Oxidative stress markers in lymphocytes
- Direzione dell'effetto
- Positive
- Rischio di bias
- Unclear
Abstract
Over 65 million individuals worldwide are estimated to have Long COVID (LC), a complex multisystemic condition marked by fatigue, post-exertional malaise, and other symptoms resembling myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). With no clinically approved treatments or reliable diagnostic markers, there is an urgent need to define the molecular underpinnings of these conditions. By studying bioenergetic characteristics of peripheral blood lymphocytes in 25 healthy controls, 27 ME/CFS, and 20 LC donors, we find both ME/CFS and LC donors exhibit signs of elevated oxidative stress, especially in the memory subset. Using a combination of flow cytometry, RNA-seq, mass spectrometry, and systems chemistry analysis, we observed aberrations in reactive oxygen species (ROS) clearance pathways including elevated glutathione levels, decreases in mitochondrial superoxide dismutase protein levels, and glutathione peroxidase 4-mediated lipid oxidative damage. Strikingly, these redox pathways changes show sex-specific trends. While ME/CFS females exhibit higher total ROS and mitochondrial calcium levels, males have normal ROS levels, with pronounced mitochondrial lipid oxidative damage. In females, these higher ROS levels correlate with T cell hyperproliferation, consistent with the known role of elevated ROS in initiating proliferation. This hyperproliferation can be attenuated by metformin, suggesting this Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug as a possible treatment, as also suggested by a recent clinical study of LC patients. Moreover, these results suggest a shared mechanistic basis for the systemic phenotypes of ME/CFS and LC, which can be detected by quantitative blood cell measurements, and that effective, patient-tailored drugs might be discovered using standard lymphocyte stimulation assays.
TL;DR
Both ME/CFS and LC are mechanistically related and could be diagnosed with quantitative blood cell measurements, and it is suggested that effective, patient tailored drugs might be discovered using standard lymphocyte stimulation assays.
Used In Evidence Reviews
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