Document detail
ID

doi:10.1186/s12866-023-03149-5...

Author
Bayardo-González, Rubén Alberto Peña-Rodríguez, Marcela Pereira-Suárez, Ana Laura Rubio-Sánchez, Alina Xcaret García-Chagollán, Mariel Valenzuela-Orozco, Daniel Natividad Lizarazo-Taborda, Melida del Rosario Mora-Mora, Jesús Vega-Magaña, Natali
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

Mycology

Year

2024

listing date

1/24/2024

Keywords
covid-19 microbiome cytokines inflammation women-s health prevotella = 1 status load = 0 covid-19 ace2 microbiome expression health
Metrics

Abstract

Background COVID-19 emerged in late 2019 and has occasioned more than 765 millions cumulative cases and 6.9 millions of deaths globally.

Notably, around 70% of patients with severe COVID-19 are men.

Therefore, it is to be presumed that women have a hormonal protector factor in inflammation and ACE2 expression.

On the other hand, oral health status, and local microbiome can be key factors to respiratory viral infections control.

Nevertheless, it has been poorly investigated.

In our study 20 premenopausal, 18 postmenopausal and 22 men with COVID-19 were included.

Oral health status, viral load, lingual ACE2 expression, as well as microbiome, estrogens and cytokines in saliva were analyzed.

Results Our results showed a lower expression of ACE2 in tongue cells of postmenopausal compared with premenopausal ( p  = 0.05), and a strong negative correlation between saliva estrogen and viral load ( r  = -0.76; p  = 0.001).

Respect to IFN-γ ( p  = 0.05), IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-18, and IL-23 levels were increased in postmenopausal.

Oral microbiome signature of premenopausal was characterized by Prevotella melaninogenica (Log2 = 26.68; p  = 1.34e-10) , Haemophilus (Log2 = 23.99; p  = 2.96e-9) , and Alloprevotella (Log2 = 7.92; p  = 0.0001) .

On the other hand, Leptotrichia (Log2 = -18.74; p  = 0.001) , Tanerella (Log2 = -17.08; p  = 0.004) , and Clostridiales (Log2 = -2.88; p  = 0.04) represented the poor oral health group compared with the adequate group which was enriched with the commensal microorganism Neisseria perflava (Log2 = 26.70; p  = 1.74e-7) .

Furthermore, the high viral load group was characterized by Prevotella nanceiensis (Log2 = 19.60; p  = 6.06e-8) , Prevotella melaninogenica (Log2 = 21.45; p  = 9.59e-6) , Alloprevotella (Log2 = 23.50; p  = 2.70e-7) and bacteria from the red complex Porphyromonas endodentalis (Log2 = 21.97; p  = 1.38e-7) .

Conclusions Postmenopausal and men have a poor oral health status which could be related to a detrimental progression of COVID-19 also linked to a lower expression of ACE2, lower saliva estrogen levels and oral dysbiosis.

Nevertheless, functional studies are required for a deeper knowledge.

Bayardo-González, Rubén Alberto,Peña-Rodríguez, Marcela,Pereira-Suárez, Ana Laura,Rubio-Sánchez, Alina Xcaret,García-Chagollán, Mariel,Valenzuela-Orozco, Daniel Natividad,Lizarazo-Taborda, Melida del Rosario,Mora-Mora, Jesús,Vega-Magaña, Natali, 2024, Insights into estrogen impact in oral health & microbiome in COVID-19, BioMed Central

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