1. Expression profiling of inflammation-related genes including IFI-16, NOTCH2, CXCL8, THBS1 in COVID-19 patients
- Author
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Shahrzad, Hamldar, Seyed Jalal, Kiani, Majid, Khoshmirsafa, Javid Sadri, Nahand, Hamed, Mirzaei, AliReza, Khatami, Roya, Kahyesh-Esfandiary, Khadijeh, Khanaliha, Ahmad, Tavakoli, Kimiya, Babakhaniyan, and Farah, Bokharaei-Salim
- Subjects
Inflammation ,Pharmacology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Bioengineering ,General Medicine ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Leukocytes, Mononuclear ,Humans ,Receptor, Notch2 ,Biomarkers ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The present study aimed to scrutinize the expression profile of inflammatory-related genes (IFI-16, NOTCH2, CXCL8, and THBS1) from acute to post-acute stage of this infectious epidemic. The current cross-sectional study consisted of 53 acute-phase COVID-19 patients and 53 healthy individuals between February and March 2021. The extraction of total RNA was performed from PBMC specimens and also expression level of selected genes (IFI-16, NOTCH2, CXCL8, and THBS1) was evaluated by real-time PCR. Subsequently, levels of these factors were re-measured six weeks after the acute phase to determine if the levels of chosen genes returned to normal after the acute phase of COVID-19. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was plotted to test potential of genes as a diagnostic biomarker. The expression levels of inflammatory-related genes were significantly different between healthy and COVID-19 subjects. Besides, a significant higher CXCL8 level was found in the acute-phase COVID-19 compared to post-acute-phase infection which may be able to be considered as a potential biomarker for distinguishing between the acute phases from the post-acute-phase status. Deregulation of the inflammatory-related genes in COVID-19 patients, especially CXCL-8, can be serving as potent biomarkers to manage the COVID-19 infection.
- Published
- 2022