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Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF): The link between obesity and COVID-19.

Authors :
AbdelMassih A
Yacoub E
Husseiny RJ
Kamel A
Hozaien R
El Shershaby M
Rajab M
Yacoub S
Eid MA
Elahmady M
Gadalla M
Mokhtar S
Hassan AA
Abou-Zeid AS
Hussein M
Aboushadi N
Emad N
Zahra N
Hassan A
Hussein E
Ibrahim N
El Nahhas N
Elahmady T
Khallaf M
Mustafa H
Anis N
Albehairy M
Hanna F
Moris L
Ye J
Source :
Obesity medicine [Obes Med] 2021 Mar; Vol. 22, pp. 100317. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Dec 30.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The COVID-19 death toll has involved to date more than 1 million confirmed deaths. The death rate is even higher in the obese COVID-19 patients, as a result of hypoxia, due to the interplay between adipose tissue hypoxia and obstructive sleep apnea. The discrepancy of manifestations seen in COVID-19 seems to be mediated by a differential immune response rather than a differential viral load. One of the key players of the immune response is HIF. HIF-1β is a stable constitutively expressed protein in the nucleus; and under hypoxic changes, its activity is unaffected, whereas the HIF-α subunit has a short half-life and because of its degradation by an enzyme known as propyl hydroxylase; under hypoxic conditions, propyl hydroxylase gets deactivated thus leading to the stabilization of HIF-1α. As mentioned before, HIF-1α expression is triggered by hypoxic states, this crippling condition will aggravate the pro-inflammatory characteristics of HIF-1α. The vast majority of decompensated COVID19 cases manifest with drastic lung injury and severe viral pneumonia, the infection-induced hypoxia will the existing hypoxia in obesity. This will additionally augment HIF-1α levels that will provoke the already existing cytokines' storm to fulminant. Consequently, this will directly correlate the effect of a hypoxic environment with the increase of HIF-1α level. HIFɑ exists in two main isoforms HIF-1α and HIF-2α. HIF-1α and HIF-2α act in distinct ways in how they work on different target genes. For example, HIF-2α may act on hemopoietin genes (heme-regulating genes); while HIF-1α acts on EPO. HIF-1α release seems to be markedly augmented in obesity due to adipose tissue hypoxia and obstructive sleep apnea resulting in cyclic hypoxia. HIF-1α can also be secreted by direct viral proteolytic effects. Whereas, HIF-2α is stimulated by chronic hypoxia. HIF-1α exerts detrimental effects on the immune system, characterized by unopposed pro-inflammation at the macrophages, dendritic cells, T cells, and complement levels resulting in cytokines' storm, which is linked to the poor outcomes of COVID-19. On the other hand, HIF-2α role is regulatory and largely opposes the actions mediated by HIF-1α. In view of this, inhibiting HIF-1α release or switching its production to HIF-2α by natural products such as resveratrol or by synthetic drugs, offer a good therapeutic strategy that can prevent COVID-19 worst outcome in infected patients. The approach of breaking the vicious circle between lung damage-induced hypoxia and HIF-1α pro-inflammatory stimulant through drugs is considered to be extremely promising as a therapeutic manner to combat further deterioration of COVID19 cases.<br />Competing Interests: Authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.<br /> (© 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2451-8476
Volume :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Obesity medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33521378
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obmed.2020.100317