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COVID-19 patient transcriptomic and genomic profiling reveals comorbidity interactions with psychiatric disorders

Medicine and Health

COVID-19 patient transcriptomic and genomic profiling reveals comorbidity interactions with psychiatric disorders

M. A. Moni, P. Lin, et al.

Discover the intriguing connections between COVID-19 and psychiatric disorders in this enlightening study by Mohammad Ali Moni, Ping-l Lin, Julian M. W. Quinn, and Valsamma Eapen. The research uncovers shared gene expression pathways and genomic alterations, particularly highlighting the alarming correlation between PTSD and COVID-19, alongside potential therapeutic insights in anti-inflammatory treatments.... show more
Abstract
Psychiatric symptoms are seen in some COVID-19 patients, as direct or indirect sequelae, but it is unclear whether SARS-CoV-2 infection interacts with underlying neuronal or psychiatric susceptibilities. Such interactions might arise from COVID-19 immune responses, from infection of neurons themselves or may reflect social-psychological causes. To clarify this we sought the key gene expression pathways altered in COVID-19 also affected in bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and schizophrenia, since this may identify pathways of interaction that could be treatment targets. We performed large scale comparisons of whole transcriptome data and immune factor transcript data in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from COVID-19 patients and patients with psychiatric disorders. We also analysed genome-wide association study (GWAS) data for symptomatic COVID-19 patients, comparing GWAS and whole-genome sequence data from patients with bipolar disorder, PTSD and schizophrenia patients. These studies revealed altered signalling and ontology pathways shared by COVID-19 patients and the three psychiatric disorders. Finally, co-expression and network analyses identified gene clusters common to the conditions. COVID-19 patients had peripheral blood immune system profiles that overlapped with those of patients with psychiatric conditions. From the pathways identified, PTSD profiles were the most highly correlated with COVID-19, perhaps consistent with stress-immune system interactions seen in PTSD. We also revealed common inflammatory pathways that may exacerbate psychiatric disorders, which may support the usage of anti-inflammatory medications in these patients. It also highlights the potential clinical application of multi-level dataset studies in difficult-to-treat psychiatric disorders in this COVID-19 pandemic.
Publisher
Translational Psychiatry
Published On
Authors
Mohammad Ali Moni, Ping-l Lin, Julian M. W. Quinn, Valsamma Eapen
Tags
COVID-19
psychiatric disorders
gene expression
PTSD
bipolar disorder
inflammatory pathways
genomic alterations
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