International Journal of Biomedicine (Dec 2023)

Some Aspects of Mast Cells Carboxypeptidase A3 Participation in the Pathogenesis of COVID-19

  • Andrey V. Budnevsky,
  • Sergey N. Avdeev,
  • Evgeniy S. Ovsyannikov,
  • Nadezhda G. Alekseeva,
  • Victoria V. Shishkina,
  • Inessa A. Savushkina,
  • Inna M. Perveeva,
  • Sofia N. Feigelman,
  • Avag G. Kitoyan,
  • Valeria R. Drobysheva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21103/Article13(4)_OA11
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. 301 – 305

Abstract

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Background: This study aimed to determine the involvement of carboxypeptidase A3 (CPA3) in developing lung damage in patients with COVID-19. Methods and Results: The study included samples of autopsy material from the lungs of patients who died as a result of severe COVID-19 (the main group [MG] and persons who died from external causes (the control group [CG]). Immunohistochemical staining for CPA3 was carried out. A quantitative study of CPA3-positive mast cells (MCs) and the degree of their degranulation was carried out using a ×40 objective lens with an analysis of ≥50 fields of view with further conversion to 1 mm². Significant representation of CPA3-positive MCs per 1 mm2 of CPA3-positive MCs, CPA3-positive MCs with signs of degranulation (SD), and co-adjacent MCs was found in the MG compared to the CG (P=0.01 in all cases). In the main group, positive correlations were identified between the total number of CPA3-positive MCs, CPA3-positive MCs with SD and the blood hemoglobin level shortly before death (r=0.491 [P=0.008] and r=0.521 [P=0.004], respectively). Co-adjacent CPA3-positive MCs were negatively correlated with blood eosinophils at the beginning of hospitalization (r=-0.420 [P=0.023]). Also, the number of separately lying, CPA3-positive MCs negatively correlated with the blood monocyte shortly before death (r=-0.384 [P=0.044]). A positive correlation was established between the total number of CPA3-positive MCs, CPA3-positive MCs with SD, and adjacent CPA3-positive MCs with total blood protein in patients at the beginning of hospitalization (r=0.431 [P=0.020], r=0.449 [P=0.015] and r=0.456 [P=0.013], respectively). In addition, the study demonstrated a positive correlation between CPA3-positive MCs with SD and the total number of CPA3-positive MCs with blood aPTT levels (r=0.304 [P=0.045] and r=0.375 [P=0.045], respectively). A negative correlation was also found between the total number of CPA3-positive MCs and the blood INR level (r=-0.812 [P=0.050]). Finally, in patients at the beginning of hospitalization, a negative correlation was found between CPA3-positive MCs with SD, CPA3-positive MCs without SD, separately located CPA3-positive MCs, adjacent CPA3-positive MCs, and the total number of CPA3-positive MCs with blood amylase (r=-0.550 [P=0.002], r=-0.452 [P=0.045], r=-0.485 [P=0.030], r=-0.622 [P=0.008], and r=-0.590 [P=0.006], respectively). Conclusion: Our study identifies the potential involvement of CPA3 in the pathogenesis of severe COVID-19. However, many aspects of its participation remain unclear and require further study.

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