Nature Communications (Mar 2024)

Long-term effects of Omicron BA.2 breakthrough infection on immunity-metabolism balance: a 6-month prospective study

  • Yanhua Li,
  • Shijie Qin,
  • Lei Dong,
  • Shitong Qiao,
  • Xiao Wang,
  • Dongshan Yu,
  • Pengyue Gao,
  • Yali Hou,
  • Shouzhen Quan,
  • Ying Li,
  • Fengyan Fan,
  • Xin Zhao,
  • Yueyun Ma,
  • George Fu Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46692-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

Read online

Abstract There have been reports of long coronavirus disease (long COVID) and breakthrough infections (BTIs); however, the mechanisms and pathological features of long COVID after Omicron BTIs remain unclear. Assessing long-term effects of COVID-19 and immune recovery after Omicron BTIs is crucial for understanding the disease and managing new-generation vaccines. Here, we followed up mild BA.2 BTI convalescents for six-month with routine blood tests, proteomic analysis and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq). We found that major organs exhibited ephemeral dysfunction and recovered to normal in approximately six-month after BA.2 BTI. We also observed durable and potent levels of neutralizing antibodies against major circulating sub-variants, indicating that hybrid humoral immunity stays active. However, platelets may take longer to recover based on proteomic analyses, which also shows coagulation disorder and an imbalance between anti-pathogen immunity and metabolism six-month after BA.2 BTI. The immunity-metabolism imbalance was then confirmed with retrospective analysis of abnormal levels of hormones, low blood glucose level and coagulation profile. The long-term malfunctional coagulation and imbalance in the material metabolism and immunity may contribute to the development of long COVID and act as useful indicator for assessing recovery and the long-term impacts after Omicron sub-variant BTIs.