Journal of Men's Health (Jun 2023)

LY6E level associated with smoking as risk for lung cancer patients susceptible to COVID-19

  • Ying-Yu Ma,
  • Jing-Xing Si,
  • Xiao-Zhou Mou,
  • Hai Zou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22514/jomh.2023.044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 6
pp. 20 – 25

Abstract

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Studies revealed that cancer patients seemed more susceptible to COVID-19 and the clinical symptoms were serious. A recent study depicted that lymphocyte antigen 6 complex, locus E (LY6E) might inhibit coronavirus entry into cells by interfering with the membrane fusion process mediated through spike protein, and potently restricting the SARS-CoV-2 (Severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus 2) infection. LY6E mRNA level in lung cancer was detected by publicly available datasets. Patient-specific features were used to analyze the potential factors that could affect LY6E level. Analysis of association between LY6E level and immune infiltration was also performed. In present study, it was found that smoker with lung adenocarcinoma showed lower LY6E level than non-smoker (p < 0.05). In LUSC (lung squamous cell carcinoma) patients, reformed smokers showed higher LY6E than smokers (p < 0.05). These results suggested that smoke can be a risk susceptible to COVID-19 in lung cancer patients. Further studies exhibited that LY6E was positively associated with immune cell infiltration in lung adenocarcinoma, indicating that LY6E may influence the infection severity of COVID-19 in lung cancer patients. In summary, smoke may downregulate LY6E level and exacerbate infection and deterioration of COVID-19 in lung cancer patients.

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