Authors
Yuping Cai, Daniel J Kim, Takehiro Takahashi, David I Broadhurst, Hong Yan, Shuangge Ma, Nicholas JW Rattray, Arnau Casanovas-Massana, Benjamin Israelow, Jon Klein, Carolina Lucas, Tianyang Mao, Adam J Moore, M Catherine Muenker, Ji Eun Oh, Julio Silva, Patrick Wong, Yale IMPACT Research team, Albert I Ko, Sajid A Khan, Akiko Iwasaki, Caroline H Johnson
Publication date
2021/7/6
Journal
Science Signaling
Volume
14
Issue
690
Pages
eabf8483
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has poorer clinical outcomes in males than in females, and immune responses underlie these sex-related differences. Because immune responses are, in part, regulated by metabolites, we examined the serum metabolomes of COVID-19 patients. In male patients, kynurenic acid (KA) and a high KA–to–kynurenine (K) ratio (KA:K) positively correlated with age and with inflammatory cytokines and chemokines and negatively correlated with T cell responses. Males that clinically deteriorated had a higher KA:K than those that stabilized. KA inhibits glutamate release, and glutamate abundance was lower in patients that clinically deteriorated and correlated with immune responses. Analysis of data from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project revealed that the expression of the gene encoding the enzyme that produces KA, kynurenine aminotransferase, correlated with …
Total citations
2021202220232024928237
Scholar articles
Y Cai, DJ Kim, T Takahashi, DI Broadhurst, H Yan… - Science Signaling, 2021