Prediction of Post-Acute-Sequelae of COVID-19 by Cargo Protein Biomarkers of Blood Total Extracellular Vesicles in Acute COVID-19.
Goetzl. Edward J EJ; Yao. Pamela J PJ; Kapogiannis. Dimitrios D
Key Findings
- Extracellular vesicle (EV) humanin levels drop in acute COVID patients who later develop long‑COVID (PASC).
- EV humanin stays low in PASC patients who have neuropsychiatric symptoms.
- Other mitochondrial peptides (MOTS‑c) also fall and the stress protein SARM‑1 rises, linking mitochondrial dysfunction to long‑COVID risk.
Practical Outcomes
- Low humanin in blood EVs may flag a higher risk of long‑COVID, so tracking it could help identify vulnerable individuals. For biohackers, this hints that boosting humanin (e.g., with peptide supplements) might be worth exploring, but clinical trials are needed before it becomes a reliable protocol.
Summary
The study found that people with COVID-19 who later develop long‑COVID have lower levels of the mitochondrial peptide humanin (carried in blood‑borne extracellular vesicles) during the acute illness, and those with ongoing brain‑related symptoms also keep low humanin levels. This suggests humanin could be a warning sign for who might get long‑COVID and its mental effects, but the research only measured it, it didn’t test any treatments.
Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 invades mitochondria of infected cells resulting in disordered metabolism, mitophagy, and abnormal levels of mitochondrial proteins in extracellular vesicles. Blood extracellular vesicle SARS-CoV-2 proteins and mitochondrial proteins were quantified in COVID-19 to assess possible roles as biomarkers. Total extracellular vesicles were precipitated from blood of age- and gender-matched participants with no infection (n=10), acute COVID-19 (n=16), post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC or long COVID) (n=30), or post-acute COVID without PASC (n=8) and their extracted proteins quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). Total extracellular vesicle levels of S1 (receptor-binding domain [RBD]) protein were significantly higher in acute infections than in uninfected controls, post-acute infection without PASC, and PASC. Total extracellular vesicle levels of nucleocapsid (N) protein were significantly higher in PASC than in uninfected controls, acute infections, and post-acute infection without PASC. Neither acute levels of S1(RBD) or N proteins predicted progression to PASC. Levels of neither SARS-CoV-2 protein in established PASC correlated with neuropsychiatric manifestations. Significant decreases in total extracellular vesicle levels of the mitochondrial proteins MOTS-c, VDAC-1, and humanin, and elevations of levels of SARM-1 were observed in acutely infected patients who would develop PASC. Significant decreases in total extracellular vesicle levels of MOTS-c and humanin, but not VDAC-1, and elevations of total extracellular vesicle levels of SARM-1 were characteristic of PASC patients with neuropsychiatric manifestations. Total extracellular vesicle levels of SARS-CoV-2 proteins in COVID-19 indicate intracellular presence of SARS-CoV-2. Abnormal total extracellular vesicles levels of mitochondrial proteins in acute infections predict a high risk of PASC and later in established PASC are indicative of neuropsychiatric manifestations.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-04-17T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.amjmed.2023.03.026
10
22