Sun Yitang, Chatterjee Radhika, Ronanki Akash, Ye Kaixiong
Department of Genetics, Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States.
Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States.
Front Med (Lausanne). 2022 Jun 16;9:923746. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2022.923746. eCollection 2022.
Higher circulating polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), especially omega-3 fatty acids, have been linked to a better prognosis in patients of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). However, the effects and causality of pre-infection PUFA levels remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the observational and causal associations of circulating PUFAs with COVID-19 susceptibility and severity. We first performed a prospective cohort study in UK Biobank, with 20,626 controls who were tested negative and 4,101 COVID-19 patients, including 970 hospitalized ones. Plasma PUFAs at baseline (blood samples collected from 2007 to 2010) were measured by nuclear magnetic resonance, including total PUFAs, omega-3 PUFAs, omega-6 PUFAs, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), linoleic acid (LA), and the omega-6/omega-3 ratio. Moreover, going beyond UK Biobank, we leveraged summary statistics from existing genome-wide association studies to perform bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses to examine the causal associations of eight individual PUFAs, measured in either plasma or red blood cells, with COVID-19 susceptibility and severity. In the observational association analysis of each PUFA measure separately, total, omega-3, and omega-6 PUFAs, DHA, and LA were associated with a lower risk of severe COVID-19. Omega-3 PUFAs and DHA were also associated with a lower risk of testing positive for COVID-19. The omega-6/omega-3 ratio was positively associated with risks of both susceptibility and severity. When omega-6, omega-3, and their ratio are jointly analyzed, only omega-3 PUFAs remained significantly and inversely associated with both susceptibility and severity. The forward MR analysis indicated that docosapentaenoic acid (DPA-n3) and arachidonic acid (AA) might be causally associated with a lower risk of severe COVID-19, with OR (95% CI) per one SD increase in the plasma level as 0.89 (0.81, 0.99) and 0.96 (0.94, 0.99), respectively. The reverse MR analysis did not support any causal effect of COVID-19 on PUFAs. Our observational analysis supported that higher circulating omega-3 PUFAs, especially DHA, may lower the susceptibility to and alleviate the severity of COVID-19. Our MR analysis further supported causal associations of DPA-n3 and AA with a lower risk of severe COVID-19.
循环中多不饱和脂肪酸(PUFAs)水平较高,尤其是ω-3脂肪酸,与2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)患者较好的预后相关。然而,感染前PUFA水平的影响及因果关系仍不明确。本研究旨在调查循环PUFAs与COVID-19易感性及严重程度之间的观察性关联和因果关联。我们首先在英国生物银行进行了一项前瞻性队列研究,纳入20626名检测呈阴性的对照者和4101名COVID-19患者,其中包括970名住院患者。通过核磁共振测量基线时(2007年至2010年采集的血样)的血浆PUFAs,包括总PUFAs、ω-3 PUFAs、ω-6 PUFAs、二十二碳六烯酸(DHA)、亚油酸(LA)以及ω-6/ω-3比值。此外,除了英国生物银行的数据,我们利用现有全基因组关联研究的汇总统计数据进行双向两样本孟德尔随机化(MR)分析,以检验血浆或红细胞中测量的8种个体PUFAs与COVID-19易感性及严重程度之间的因果关联。在对每种PUFA测量指标分别进行的观察性关联分析中,总PUFAs、ω-3 PUFAs、ω-6 PUFAs、DHA和LA与重症COVID-19风险较低相关。ω-3 PUFAs和DHA也与COVID-19检测呈阳性的风险较低相关。ω-6/ω-3比值与易感性和严重程度风险均呈正相关。当联合分析ω-6、ω-3及其比值时,只有ω-3 PUFAs与易感性和严重程度均仍保持显著负相关。正向MR分析表明,二十二碳五烯酸(DPA-n3)和花生四烯酸(AA)可能与重症COVID-19风险较低存在因果关联,血浆水平每增加一个标准差的OR(95%CI)分别为0.89(0.81,0.99)和0.96(0.94,0.99)。反向MR分析不支持COVID-19对PUFAs有任何因果效应。我们的观察性分析支持循环中较高水平的ω-3 PUFAs,尤其是DHA,可能降低COVID-19的易感性并减轻其严重程度。我们的MR分析进一步支持DPA-n3和AA与重症COVID-19风险较低存在因果关联。