Litcius/Paper detail

CXCL10 an important chemokine associated with cytokine storm in COVID-19 infected patients.

N. Zhang, Y.-D. Zhao, X-M Wang

2020PubMed72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The specific mechanism of cytokine storm in COVID-19 infected patients is not clear. This study aims to identify the key genes that cause cytokine storm in COVID-19 infected patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted a difference analysis on the GSE147507 data set. The analysis results are combined with immune genes to obtain immune-related genes among the differential genes. Finally, GO enrichment analysis, PPI analysis, core gene identification, and ssGSEA enrichment analysis were performed on the new gene set. RESULTS: A total of 232 differential genes were screened out. After merging with immune genes, a total of 29 immune-related genes were obtained. Further analysis revealed that the genes were enriched in 16 pathways, and the protein interaction network had a total of 29 nodes and 139 edges. After screening, the core gene was CXCL10. The ssGSEA results of CXCL10 showed that CD4 and CD8 immune-related signature were significantly enriched in high CXCL10 expression, and the samples with low CXCL10 expression were significantly enriched with monocytes and DC immune-related signature. CONCLUSIONS: CXCL10 may be a key gene related to the cytokine storm of COVID-19 infection, and it is expected to become the therapeutic target.

Topics & Concepts

Cytokine stormCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)ChemokineCXCL10Cytokine2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)StormImmunologyMedicineVirologyInflammationGeographyMeteorologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyDiseaseOutbreakCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesChemokine receptors and signalingLong-Term Effects of COVID-19